Speaking of Psychology - Dyslexia myths, misconceptions and facts, with Tim Odegard, PhD
Episode Date: October 8, 2025Dyslexia is one of the most common learning differences, yet it’s still widely misunderstood. Tim Odegard, PhD, talks about how dyslexia is diagnosed and defined; his own experience growing up with ...dyslexia; how kids at risk can be identified early; what interventions work best; how reading difficulties can affect mental health; and why talking about the “gifts” of dyslexia can be problematic. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Reading is a skill that many of us take for granted, but for millions of children and adults,
it can be a daily struggle. Dislexia is one of the most common learning differences,
potentially affecting up to one in five people, yet it's still widely misunderstood and misdiagnosed.
Today we're going to talk to a psychologist who studies dyslexia and reading difficulties
about the state of dyslexia science. What causes dyslexia? How is it diagnosed, and
and how early can we identify it?
What interventions work best to help people with dyslexia learn how to read?
How to reading difficulties affect mental health?
And what does the research say about how families, educators, and schools can best support struggling readers?
Welcome to Speaking of Psychology, the flagship podcast of the American Psychological Association
that examines the links between psychological science and everyday life.
I'm Kim Mills.
My guest today is Dr. Tim Odegaard, a professor of psychology and the Catherine Davis-Murphy
Chair of Excellence in Dyslexic Studies at Middle Tennessee State University.
As a developmental cognitive psychologist, Dr. Odegaard studies how to identify struggling readers,
what are the most effective intervention methods, and how can teachers help dyslexic students.
He has written dozens of peer-reviewed articles and serves as editor-in-chief of the journal Analysts of Dyslexia.
Dr. Odegaard also brings personal experience to this topic, having been diagnosed with dyslexia himself.
Dr. Odegaard, thank you for joining me today.
Thanks, Kim. I'm really glad to be here today with you.
You've written and spoken about your own experience with dyslexia, and I'd like to start there.
Tell us what it was like learning to read for you and how do those early experiences influence the work you're doing today?
Well, learning to read for me was extremely difficult, and it's also important to highlight that
spelling is a real challenge for those of us with dyslexia as well. So reading and writing are
really challenging. Dislexia earth really emerges in the early grades. So for me, when I was in the
readers, it was fairly straightforward when I was able to listen to other children and the teacher
read words and a limited number of them, memorize those, and masquerade as if I was really
reading and pronouncing those words. I understood the book if I heard it read to me, but it was
really hard for me to pronounce the words. So I really masqueraded for quite a while until it really
became apparent that I wasn't able to read the words for myself and I was really memorizing them.
It's a strategy that many of us used to kind of hide in the distance in the background until we're
uncovered. So it definitely started in third grade where my formal testing happened. And
unfortunately, because of the method used at the time when I was being identified, I never got a
formal diagnosis of dyslexia. They knew I couldn't read very well. But my IQ,
testing was way too low. So the model that was being used at the time, the IQ discrepancy
limited what I was able to do. So that was kind of my early childhood was struggling,
getting the testing, thinking that help would be on the way and then actually being denied
the services through the IDEA federal regulations here in the United States.
Let me back up a minute. You said your IQ was much too low. Don't you mean your IQ was high
and your reading comprehension was the problem? No, actually. So that's a good
way of highlighting that. In the discrepancy model, what you want to find is somebody who has an IQ that
suggests their potential, a way of measuring a person's potential in the United States in particular
for a long time, is high enough to say that we're really going to be able to achieve more than
what we're showing in an academic area. For me, it was reading and spelling. They knew that my reading
and spelling was well below average, but my IQ test wasn't that high in the average range. So when you
looked at the difference, there wasn't a big enough span. So the logic at the time was,
is if we're not able to perform on this one test and IQ test high enough to show that we have
greater potential, then what we're experiencing are expected underachievement. It was expected
that I would struggle with reading because my intelligence wasn't high enough to allow me to do
more. I see. Now, for our listeners who are new to this topic, can you briefly explain
what dyslexia is? I mean, are most reading difficulties?
to dyslexia or is it just one thing among many that can cause reading problems?
It's one thing among many. We've now really identified that dyslexia is in this pantheon
of language-based learning differences. And what dyslexia really impacts is there's a select few of us
who have challenges with reading and spelling words accurately, developing efficiency with reading
individual words, and that will then impede our ability to read text fluently. So at the basic
literacy skills level we really show up and are identified. This typically is something that comes up
early because it's in the most basic skills in reading and writing, so reading words and spelling
words that we show our deficits. But there are other challenges with language learning that really
can present in different ways and cause different types of outcomes. And it's not uncommon for those
of us who struggle to read and spell words to also have issues with other things, larger language
differences. Developmental language disability is one of those types of differences. There's a high
co-occurrence of kids who struggle to understand how we put words together to make meaningful
utterances, phrases, and sentences and paragraphs, as well as how to comprehend the language
on the more general level, the oral language. Is there any connection between dyslexia and
the ability to read numerals? I mean, if you can't distinguish letters, can you still distinguish numbers?
That's a good question.
So there is a link between dyslexia and the ability to do math, but it's not necessarily
on those numerals.
Since the primary driver of dyslexia has not been identified to be a visual-based one,
learning numbers is isolated units and being able to distinguish those is not typically a challenge
for those of us.
I'm a good case of example.
For something else you might think would be a challenge, which is learning to read musical
notation because I'm a musician and I went to college on a music scholarship and I play multiple
instruments. That was not a challenge for me. So that's kind of a misnomer out there that it might be
challenging for us to do numbers or even learn how to read music because it's often thought that
we see letters backwards, but that is actually a myth that's been out there. What we often have is
limited exposure to print text. And when you have limited exposure to text, it delays your ability to
develop the visual representations to see those letters and see them properly. So we're just
developmentally delayed in that. The real nexus seems to be in how we process language as one of the
primary drivers very early in life. We can find those types of things with us. What do we know about
what's going on in the brain that causes dyslexia? I mean, if you do an fMRI of a person with
dyslexia, does their brain look different? It does. I've actually done some of the original research in
this area with my own brain imaging research and others, and that's continued. We typically say
that it's the left language centers in the brain that show underactivation, as well as a lack
of interconnectivity, kind of functioning as a network, if you will. We used to think that we knew
kind of a lot about it in the sense of like, it clearly looks like this is a signature. It does have
like a neurobiological predisposition that can increase the likelihood that we present.
We find that through genetic studies, but most importantly, family risk studies.
Having a first-degree relative to dyslexia is a really strong risk factor.
But the brain signature really is one that we're still grappling with what it means.
Some of the most important work in here was done by a colleague of mine, Nadine Gob,
as well as Ola Ozenoff-Palcheck up at Harvard at MIT.
And what they were really showing is even before you are in school, even before kindergarten,
kids at high family risk will show specific differences in brain structure as well as brain function.
And those differences at three and four will actually predict a child's later ability to read
words accurately and efficiently. So we do know that there's a brain basis. What we think we used to
know about is architecture and what it looks like has really been reshaked by modern neuroimaging.
I said in the intro that dyslexia may affect up to 20% of people. Is that,
accurate and is that number changing over time? I mean, it seems to me that we have better diagnostics
than we had. When I was a kid, I mean, there was nothing called dyslexia. We didn't know that at all. So
the kid couldn't read. You know, the kid was thought to be not very bright. Right. And that's actually
one of the misnomer's that we try to dispel with the term dyslexia, which is a person can be bright or
exceptionally bright and still struggle to read and spell words. The 20% prevalence rate really depends on how you
decide where to cut and determine the severity that you expect someone to present with and the
identification model. The challenge with dyslexia is, like with many conditions, is it's on a severity.
We're talking to people about psychological science and psychology. Mental health is on a severity.
Your depression can be major depression. You could have dyshthymia, which is just to say a mild
form of depression. We often forget that even in the DSM-5 are, you know, the diagnostic manual for
mental health, we're dealing with spectrum conditions or continuum conditions that are on a continuum.
So I like to say that because sometimes people will use what I'm about to say kind of against
the term of dyslexia. It's on a continuum of severity, just like many conditions are that we
consider. We often identify it as a discrete category, meaning either you have dyslexia or you don't
have dyslexia. What that presents is a challenge, which is in the school day setting or a private
practice with a neuropsychologist or a clinical psychologist or some other professional who can do
identification, we think that we're going to come up with a black or white determination.
But how severe you want the child's reading and spelling difficulties to be and how you identify
them will really determine what the prevalence is. And so we can be anywhere from three to five percent
if we come in and actually look at who doesn't respond well to intervention and are really
persistently poor responders, that's about 3 to 5% of the population. Or if we come into a population
and we look in a school-based setting across a district or a state or even a region as I've done in my
research, we might find as many as 20 or even more kids who are struggling with word reading
and spelling. It's all about how we define it and how we set the threshold for who we're going to
say categorically has a specific learning disability of reading that we call dyslexia.
And I think that's true of many other conditions.
And so it shouldn't be used as ammunition to say that somehow dyslexia is not real.
Otherwise, depression is not real because depression also is on a continuum.
Right.
Well, let's talk about how dyslexia is diagnosed.
You've written about a long history of problems with diagnosis that have left many people
failing to get the services that they need.
And often those are people with less privilege to begin with.
Can you talk about where we are today in terms of identifying people, young people with dyslexia?
Correct. I've identified historically that on average, even independent of those challenges,
we've had issues with an under-identification, especially in Texas, for example, where I reported
that the number of students being identified with dyslexia under state law there was zero,
which is really important because there's been kind of a mispresentation of the dyslexia being really
way over-identified and actually being misclassified away from other categories.
My published research on this looking at actual state record shows that on average a few years
ago, there were only zero kids on a high school campus that were being identified with dyslexia.
So it's a real challenge for all children.
This isn't just like a black or brown problem or a rich or poor problem.
And that's really pushed this upspring in advocacy and legislation around dyslexia Roman country
because it's really a global issue that affects all of us.
Some of the challenges we've experienced is it's hard to identify who really has something
that you would call a disability versus the context they're in.
Since we have such a challenge in many contexts with a lot of kids struggling to read and spell words,
some of my research that I've also published shows it up to 65% and some underperforming poor schools.
Some of these schools are almost predominantly white schools sometimes,
or they could be a mixture of different ethnic groups.
This is really a problem for all.
It really makes it challenging for teachers.
Who are you going to say are the even 20% of those kids at the upper limit who have dyslexia
when the majority of your students can't read and spell words?
So an identification in a sea of struggling readers is one challenge that I've talked about
highlighted, that if we don't get basic literacy right in the early grades,
it creates this upper elementary middle and high school problem of so many kids are struggling
that we can't identify the exceptional ones who have this difference that set them up to struggle to begin with.
That's one challenge.
Context matters.
Second, the identification model you use also matters.
I grew up poor in white in a family that was blue collar.
So I didn't perform well in an IQ test for real reasons.
My vocabulary and my language development wasn't necessarily an enriched environment with college educated parents around me to support me for doing well in that test.
And so when we take an IQ index as an indicator of who will and will not qualify for services for dyslexia,
a form of a specific learning disability,
then it really sets up kind of a discrepancy between who will and who will not,
the haves and have not for that category.
So that's a challenge.
Then another model that's been used is that, well, we put them in really good instruction
and we see who responds or who are the persistently poor responders.
We're going to use what we call the instructional discrepancy.
We put everybody in good core instruction for English language learning, how to read it, write, it, spell it, and understand it.
We see who is struggling to learn those skills.
And from those kids, we'll flag those who are going to come out and are going to be tiered up for getting intervention and a label of a specific learning disability like dyslexia.
The challenge there is, is that we're struggling across the United States to actually implement English arts really, really well in schools.
and when we struggle with teaching reading,
then we create the disconnect between our ability to use
an effective identification model based on instructional discrepancy to find kids.
What that does is it pushes those of us who know better
and can do better and have the resources to go outside of the school,
and we get psychologists, diagnosticians, and others to do independent testing.
We come back into the schools and we say, look, my kid can't read.
They're struggling.
They're way behind.
They've been showing up to school.
What are we going to do with it?
This looks like they have a disability of some type.
So you can see that there's really some challenges that we present kind of across the board.
And what I want to highlight is, elevating instruction for all across all schools is going to create the context we need to identify those of us who are set up to struggle and need more instruction intervention to begin with.
We're going to take a short break.
When we return, I'll talk to Dr. Odegaard about early signs of dyslexia and whether warning signs can be
identified even before children begin to learn to read.
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How early can dyslexia be identified?
Are there signs as soon as kids start learning to read,
or does it manifest even earlier than that?
That's a great question.
The answer to that is yes and,
and I won't explain that yes.
One of the challenges we have is how we define dyslexia
will always be with its primary characteristics.
Again, if we go to that tome called the DSM-5,
you're going to open it up,
and there will be a list of symptomatology,
right, what it's supposed to look like.
And there's normally like five to seven things.
That's really important because if you're not manifesting those,
you might have like a predisposition neurobiologically for something,
but you may not actually present the symptoms.
What we know is we can find risk of dyslexia really early.
I highlighted something earlier.
A first degree relative with dyslexia is a high risk indicator
that it might be difficult for you to struggle with reading and spelling later on in life.
That means at conception,
we know if a person's at an increased risk to struggle with that ability.
The challenge is, until we get into formal schooling and we're now expected to be able to read and spell words, we can't struggle.
So you can't present with the symptoms of dyslexia until you're expected to read and spell words, right?
That makes sense.
So until then, what we can do is we can find risk.
Early general language abilities at two and three are another risk of two things.
dyslexia, as well as symptoms of developmental language disability.
So you can have more of a general broad language problem.
And we've known this historically.
We knew that late talkers and other children who were presenting with some early language
problems or issues with potentially having problems later on with reading and spelling.
Now once we get to be a little bit older, we can start looking at Prince Guild development.
Is it hard for them to learn their letters and names?
Is it hard for them to learn how to put letters and names to speak sounds?
that they go with. That's another indicator. We can start to look now at something that language begets,
which is our ability to do rhymes and hear the rhymes within words, to pull out the sounds within words.
So once we get up to three and four and five, we can start to find those weaknesses.
We also know that our ability to name objects and use that part of our language system is also a
reliable indicator of aspects of reading ability. So when we start to see these early indicators,
what we're doing is we're increasing the risk indication,
almost like we're doing a heart checkup every year at our annual physical,
where we're asking these questions,
and the more questions you answer yes to,
and we take some blood work,
and the more blood work says that you have risk,
the higher risk indication is that you're at high risk for heart disease in the future.
Up until we're expecting kids to read and spell,
we can find risk of dyslexia,
which means that we can start to intervening
in helping them develop,
the language and print skills that they need to be successful later when we expect them to be able
to read and spell words.
You mentioned having a first degree relative with dyslexia.
Do you have first degree relatives with diagnosed dyslexia?
That's a great question, Kim.
And I think it goes back to something you said earlier.
We come from different generations.
So that means that my parents likely were not in the context in their poor blue collar
upbringings and where they were at.
to be able to identify them with dyslexia.
So a challenge that we don't have as much anymore
since we have more awareness
and we've been identifying a lot more people is we're finding those.
Did I have a parent who really didn't like to read
and wasn't very good at it?
Yes, I did.
Did that parent have an identification of dyslexia?
No, they did not.
So I think that we have that generational factor.
But I think today we have a much different situation
where it's more likely with awareness,
which is really important.
and I thank you for allowing me to have this space to talk about dyslexia,
that it's more common to be able to say yes.
So my son did have a first-degree relative that had dyslexia.
Me.
He also had an aunt, my sister, who had issues with reading and spelling words early in her life as well.
So we knew, and I did early preventative work starting at birth with his language development
to set him up for success.
Even with all that effort, we got to the end of first.
and reading and spelling words was really, really hard for him, despite his enriched environment,
despite having two college-educated parents in the home, despite being exceptional and doing
very well on an IQ test this time around. You know, that generational difference between
context is so important. You can see it so well on my story with my son. He aced the IQ test. He was
exceptional on the IQ test. All of his language development in so many ways was okay, but it was
still hard for him to learn and spell. So he got two years of a really intensive
structured literacy intervention that helped to set him up. He's still disfluent,
which is often a common problem, and he also struggles with spelling still, which is often
a lingering problem. But for parents who are listening, you don't have to feel guilty if you've
done all that you can. You still, you know, you don't have the wherewithal to necessarily beat it.
Exactly. I think that's really important. And some people have pushed to tight to get rid of dyslexia
a term or the category. I think it's really important to note that the lingering lifelong impact
for some of us are still there. I didn't get the intervention. I compensated. I'm called the
compensated dyslexic. My spelling is really, really, really atrocious still. My ability
to read fluently is still really, really hard. So reading anything that's not within my area of study
that I have a deep memory for and understand the structure of it really, really well is really
challenging for me. So now that we have things like Audible and other services, I consume a lot of
print through audio, which has been great for me because it means I can keep up with readings. But
it doesn't mean that I want to read for pleasure because it isn't pleasurable for me to read,
but I enjoy listening and reading. There's a few books that I'll read. I read a lot for work.
So I think it's important for us not to get rid of at least this idea of dyslexia because the persistent
challenges with spelling and writing are real, as well as the persistence was, the fluency is often
something that lingers, and that will create lifelong opportunities for us to overcome.
Let's switch gears for a minute and talk about interventions. What are the kinds of interventions
that are effective, that really work? And do most educators have access to these things?
The answer is no to the last one. Most educators don't have access.
to them, nor the training it takes to do them well, which is going to be developing knowledge of
the English language and writing system, as well as supervision and how you deliver these.
Not surprisingly, since I've highlighted the whole time that dyslexia is really this basic
reading problem with reading and spelling words, that it's going to start with looking very much
like primary reading, where we're going to be teaching letters and sounds and how to put those
together, how to read simple words. The challenge with English as a writing system is this is
a very complex writing system, which means that our words also have other layers. It's not just about
the phonics of sounding words out. It's also knowing that there's words that are going to have
larger letter patterns in them that are going to go to a pronunciation. And it's not going to comply
with this. A says a or A says A or A says all. A says five things. It's a really bloody thing. It also
says ah. So the challenge is that it's not just that letters or even a couple of letters like
diograph c h goes ch or triograph tc h goes ch it's even more complex than that. So the English
writing system of how we we take sound and put it into print is quite challenging. So for doing a really
good version of dyslexia when you have kids that if you teach them the basic stuff they just don't
automatically apply that to more complex word reading. Many of us will take more complex word
instruction as well as meaning instruction. And it needs to be implemented in a way that gets us
lots of practice reading words, reading words and sentences, reading words and text. And of course,
the ultimate reason why we read is to understand what someone's trying to tell us. So we have to
embed that within lots of opportunities for us to read and apply what we're learning to read,
read words and then also spell words to understand text.
How can having dyslexia affect a person's mental health, especially when we're talking about
children and teens in school settings?
Well, this is really important in something that's had a lot of increased awareness now.
We're actually redoing the definition of dyslexia out of the International Dyslexia Association.
And one of the drivers for that was in the original definition that we had from IDA,
from back in 2002, we would talk about secondary consequences.
If you've highlighted, I've been talking about word reading and spelling.
Accurately, efficient word reading, meaning we can read them quickly, and then text fluency,
the ability to fluently read text with expression.
We would highlight secondary consequences.
If you can't read text, then do it well.
It's probably hard to understand what someone's saying because you're spending so much of
your time and resources and psychological energies trying to read the words.
So by the time you get through, you've forgotten what the whole thing was about.
Another secondary consequence is when we're not being exposed to print,
we're not being exposed to the rich language and words that people are going to use.
So our vocabulary can lag behind as well.
Well, we had named those kind of academic areas of secondary consequences.
What we now have a preponderance of evidence for is that mental health really tanks
and those of us with dyslexia.
We feel a lot of shame.
We feel a lot of guilt.
We don't feel good about ourself.
So we have low self-esteem.
Our ability to think that we're capable of doing things or what we call our self-efficacy is also impacted.
And there's stigma associated with a label of disability, which in the public, you already
highlighted, they often think means that we're not very smart, that we're incapable of doing
anything more.
So it's a real challenge.
So what we've seen now is there's been multiple studies of studies.
We call them meta-analyses where we go out and people look at 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 studies.
When you look at people who have language-based learning differences, the two that have been studied the most are developmental language disability as well as dyslexia.
We have an increased prevalence of depression and anxiety in particular.
So we're a lot more likely to have major depression.
We're also much more likely to have issues of anxiety.
Now, those are what we call internalizing conditions.
We internalize those.
We bring those in.
We fill them inside of us about how we feel, how we process the world, how we process ourselves.
There's also evidence that we have increased externalizing problems,
which is to be a conduct problem, to be a behavioral problem, to be a problem in school,
to be a problem in life, to get wrapped up in the penal system and be winding up in prison, for
example. There's also evidence for that. But the reason for that seems to be the fact that when you
come in and experience the chronic stress of going to school every single day from early in childhood
and not having the ability to do what your peers do, to be labeled as stupid, to be labeled as dumb,
to be laughed at, to be heckled, to read in front of a class. It's not like trauma with a big
T, but it is what we call chronic stress.
Yeah.
There's a popular narrative that dyslexia comes with special gifts, like creativity or
out-of-the-box thinking.
What does the research say on that front?
Well, the research is incomplete and ongoing.
However, the research that's been done to date would say that this idea that there's
like four or five superpowers that dyslexic have is just not kind of panning out for us
right now, take creativity.
There's been two recent studies of studies, meta-analyses, that show that individual
of dyslexia on measures of creativity aren't showing any kind of ability that's any greater
than just like the general population.
Visual spatial processing is also sought to be one of those.
The anecdote that's often given is to say that, oh, people who are astrophysicists over-indexed
for people with dyslexia.
And they would use that anecdotal evidence or that kind of constrained way of saying that, oh, this must be a superpower.
Well, when you look at objective measures of visual spatial processing and you pull those research studies together and look at them in a meta-analysis, we don't see evidence that we have increased visual spatial processing.
If I'm not mistaken when I did the review and published it on this, we actually saw that there might be evidence of a little bit lower performance in some of the studies for those of us with dyslexia.
But that washes out. It's kind of like no difference. The entrepreneurism is a really interesting one. And I was listening to David and Goliath recently from Malcolm Gladwell. And he features as one of the underdog stories, those of us with dyslexia. It's a really compelling narrative to say that we have superpowers. And Malcolm Gladwell definitely highlights this. The challenge is that the methodology that's been used from a psychological science perspective on the entrepreneur research is less than optimal. And we're not really doing it well.
Does it mean that the case studies that we have, like a Steve Jobs, for example, or Richard Branson, aren't like high achieving people who identify with dyslexia who also have shown that they have these great strengths and gifts?
That's definitely true.
It can definitely also be role models for certain people.
So that one is one that's kind of like more research is needed, especially with better methodology.
The artistic pieces, too, was often one.
The great artist of the world are thought to be dyslexic.
So here's the challenge with that is.
And you did highlight that.
And I'm not a clinical psychologist.
I'm a psychological scientist.
And I was trained historically in what we call social cognitive as well as
developmental cognitive perspectives.
And a really important piece out of that research literature is the idea of stereotypes.
So the thing about a stereotype is that's when we paint a group of people with a limited
set of traits or abilities or qualities that is not true of all.
of them uniformly, but might be true of a few of them selectively. We normally think about these
as negative. We also have positive stereotypes. And so the way that I think about the gift of dyslexia
narrative is it's actually told typically in society is that when we limit the ability for us to be
exceptional to does four or five things that we say is going to be true of all of us, that's by definition
of positive stereotype. And stereotypes and even positive stereotypes are,
are also a pathway to negative thoughts about oneself.
Because what does it mean?
Like when I was doing one of my first brain imaging studies and a little girl started crying
when she was in the mock scanner.
A mock scanner is a mock-up of an MRI scanner.
I had one of my assistants in there taking this little girl to the procedures.
I was sitting with the mother in the waiting room.
We could watch what was happening through a window and we were talking about it.
And I turned to the mother and says, we have to stop the experiment.
And she says, why? I said, well, she's crying. And this isn't about what we want as adults.
It's what's best for her and her psychological well-being. Like, this is clearly an adverse situation for her.
She said, give her a second. And the little girl stopped crying. And then she started smiling.
And then she got right back into the mock scanner. And she went on it. She says, well, here's the thing about her is.
Since she's been identified and diagnosed with dyslexia, she's also learned that dyslexia is supposed to be a superpower.
and she hasn't found her superpower yet because she's not good at art.
She doesn't want to go off and be a business woman.
She's not really great with creative thinking and out-of-the-box thinking.
And so all these stereotypic things that she was supposed to be good at,
she was good at none of them.
But I would say that she was the bravest little person I knew.
She was willing to do what with grown servicemen and women who were coming in from my DOD-funded
research into the same mock scanner, would crawl out of the scanner, would be hyperventilating,
would be so afraid to do.
There were these grown men and women who went into combat,
and there was this little girl who would fearlessly get into that scanner,
and why she was crying wasn't out of fear of being in there or doing the unknown.
It was because she was afraid that she wasn't a good dyslexic.
Wow, that's tough.
That's tough, right?
That's the definition of a stereotype right there.
And I saw as a junior faculty the negative impact on this precious girl who was fearless,
And we often joked, it was like, if they showed up with one teddy bear or stuffy, then we thought we'd get them through the scanner because, you know, it's scary to go into an MRI.
If they showed up with two stuffies, it took two stuffies to get out the door that day to come and do the research.
We knew that we were going to have to stop the study.
It wasn't going to work.
But she was fearless, this little girl.
It took no stuffies for her to be there.
You know, her dad or mom didn't have to go into the scanner bay with her and hold her foot for her to be safe or comfortable in there.
Well, just to wrap up.
What's next for you? What are you working on now?
Oh, that's a great question.
I think what I'm working on now really is the translation of psychological science and the science of reading and the science of learning out there into the world to educators.
And in particular, a role that me and some others play is trying to think about how do we take all these policy that we have across the United States?
How do we recalibrate them to do more effective screening, to do early risk identification early, maybe.
even in preschool with some states that I'm working with, using more broad language screens.
So we can look at their greater risk indicators, pull them into early intervention, and actually
help the kids who have less susceptibility, have better outcomes, and then freeing up the resources
when we get to second, third, fourth, and fifth grade to give the more intensive intervention
to those who we couldn't identify earlier and help to lessen their outcomes later on.
So I'm really working in this space of translation and communication, as well as policy advocacy,
not myself, but working with the advocates and the state houses around the country to help them
reframe and rethink the dyslexia legislation.
And how do we be doing something more expansive?
You know, we don't do well as screen for language.
And when we don't screen for language, that means that a lot of kids who are going to struggle
with reading comprehension who have a developmental language disability.
They won't be identified.
There's a real need for us to think about how we bring our screening practices that have been motivated by legislation over the past 10 years into a unified system that's screening for language risk, that's identifying kids who are going to struggle with reading comprehension as well as reading the words and get the supports that they all need in there and place.
That's what I'm working on.
Well, that sounds really important.
And I want to thank you.
This has been great information.
Thank you not only for talking to me, but for sharing your own journey.
Well, Kim, thank you so much for helping to raise awareness.
I feel so honored to be able to share this in this space.
Thank you so much.
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Speaking of psychology is produced by Lee Wyner.
Thank you for listening for the American Psychological Association. I'm Kim Mills.
