By Yvonna Graham, M.Ed. Ken Robinson Did a Wonderful TED Talk Whether you read this book or not, please watch the 20 minute TED talk: Ken Robinson: Do schools kill creativity? Twenty minutes feels like about 5 minutes. Sir Ken Robinson is a profoundly good speaker. He’s funny. He delivers on real information about improving […]
education
Brave New Words by Sal Khan: A Book Review by Yvonna Graham
Khan Academy Already Had My Attention Khan Academy already had my attention as an educator (and a grandmother.) So I ordered Salman Khan’s book, Brave New Words: How AI Will Revolutionize Education (and why that’s a good thing) the day it became available. Sal Khan is, after all, the creative mathematician who drives Khan Academy, […]
Audio-Assisted Reading for Dyslexia: What the research says
Does Audio-Assisted Reading Help Dyslexic Students? Audio-assisted reading refers to reading text silently while hearing it read aloud. Hearing and seeing the words at the same time is the key. Research on audio-assisted reading shows widely different results. Some research shows that audio-assisted reading does not improve comprehension or retention of information by dyslexic students. […]
What I Mean When I Say I’m Autistic: Book Review
Autism from the inside out Autistic author Annie Kotowicz invites neurotypical readers to enter her world. Her writing is both concise and personal. She explains her neurodivergent traits from a biological standpoint, then provides clarifying examples from her own life. I found the book enjoyable reading. Kotowicz covers several neurodivergent challenges including sensory differences, relationships, […]
Proust and the Squid — A DTK Book Review
Proust and the Squid: The story and science of the reading brain, by Dr. Maryanne Wolf Dr. Maryanne Wolf has authored more than 160 scientific articles, she designed the RAVE-O reading intervention for children with dyslexia, and with Martha Denckla, co-authored the RAN/RAS naming speed tests, a major predictor of dyslexia across all languages. Currently […]
A Conversation about Audiobooks and Dyslexia
The Dyslexic Advantage is Real I first encountered Brock and Fernette Eide’s ground-breaking research on dyslexia when they published the first edition of The Dyslexic Advantage, back around 2011. At least that’s when I found it. It changed my life and my career. That book explained how my daughter could be both brilliant and extremely […]
Because I Am Dyslexic
The Saddest Word in Dyslexic History I think the saddest word in the history of dyslexic education is despite. For many dyslexic people, despite seems to define them: “If I work harder than anyone else, maybe I can get a college degree despite being dyslexic — I learned to read 150 wpm despite being dyslexic […]
The Dyslexic Advantage: A DTK Book Review
The First Edition was Great; This One is Even Better! I first reviewed this powerhouse of information back in 2017. So why did I buy the 2023 Revised and Updated edition? Because A LOT has happened in dyslexia research in the past few years, and the Eide’s are in the thick of it. This book […]
Unschooling Vocabulary
School and Education aren’t the Same Thing Unschooling doesn’t mean no education; it just means no school. The unschoolers I know put in significant time and effort providing education by asking and answering questions, finding resources, connecting kids with mentors, traveling, supporting passions, etc. Despite all this great parenting, it can be hard to justify […]
The Homework Myth, by Alfie Kohn — A DTK Book Review
Alfie Kohn Loves Research! Alfie Kohn (@alfiekohn) has a gift for analyzing research and pulling out practical applications for educators and parents. I’ve been impressed with every book of his I’ve read, so I came to The Homework Myth: Why our kids get too much of a bad thing with high expectations. It didn’t disappoint. […]