Stuff You Should Know - How Dyslexia Works
Episode Date: March 7, 2019For a learning disability that everyone seems to know about, dyslexia is maybe the most commonly misunderstood and controversial cognitive difficulty there is. Some people think it’s a gift, some pe...ople think it doesn’t even exist. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
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Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark.
There's Charles W. Chuck Bryan over there,
and there's Jerry, and this is Stuff You Should Know
about dyslexia.
How you doing?
Good, good.
How are you?
I'm doing pretty good, man.
Just, you know, hanging out over here.
Yeah?
Ready to rap.
I thought this was pretty cool.
I'm surprised that we had not discussed this yet
because it's right up our alley.
Totally.
Very Stuff You Should Know type show.
Yeah.
And I think it's an interesting,
you know, I guess it's labeled a learning disorder.
Most definitely, it's a specific learning disorder
according to the US government.
Yeah, I always just have a hard time, you know,
knowing whether or not to, like almost at affliction,
then I'm like, is that an affliction?
I don't even know.
I think it's, I think anybody with dyslexia
and anybody, any expert in the field would say
it's a learning disability.
It's a specific learning disability
that we're not entirely certain what causes it,
but most people would tell you that typically
it's considered a neurobiological condition.
They think that there's a basis to the brain
that leads to this situation where
otherwise bright and...
Capable.
Yep, and intelligent students have what they call
unexpected difficulty learning to read
and that it afflicts them their entire life.
Yeah.
But there's a lot of questions.
Yeah, sure.
That surround the definition.
And one of the problems with dyslexia research
is that that's not the official definition.
There's about as many definitions
as there are studies of dyslexia.
Yeah, this one from Yale Center for Dyslexia
and Creativity made sense to me though,
as far as just sort of a simple way to say it,
an unexpected difficulty in reading
in an individual who has the intelligence
to be a much better reader.
Right.
So in other words, like this isn't adding up,
all the tools are there,
and you should be a better reader than you are.
Right.
But you're not, so why?
What gives?
Yeah.
So there's a lot to that though, right?
Like there's this idea that if we know enough
about the brain and we have things like MRIs
and stuff like that.
So you would think that by now,
since maybe the 90s or whatever,
we would have positively identified what it is.
But there's a confounding problem that they've run into
in dyslexia research and we'll get into it more later.
But they haven't figured out if what they're looking at
is the changes that would come from not reading as much
or if the brain structure they're seeing
is actually dyslexia.
Right.
So they're having trouble with it.
I'll explain it better later.
No, but I know what you mean.
Well good, as long as you do,
but it also counts if like the million or so people
listening to this also do.
Hey everybody.
Dyslexia is very studying it and understanding it
and learning how to teach children with dyslexia
is very important because up until semi-recently,
I'm just gonna go say recently,
if you had dyslexia and you were a student,
you might've been called stupid or dumb.
And you might've been-
I'm a teacher.
Yeah, you might've been put at a separate table
and said, well, you go over here
because you can't keep up.
This one guy, man, this one really hit home.
Or not hit home, but-
Hitching the bread basket.
In the bread basket, which is like home.
Sure.
Pulitzer Prize winner Philip Schultz
was diagnosed later in life.
And he said, growing up in the 1950s,
he said basically he was placed
in what he called the dummy class.
Three children in his class were separated,
put at a table in the corner.
The teacher didn't talk to them much.
And essentially, one day the principal was coming around
and she said, hear these books, pretend to read them.
Right, the principal's coming.
Yeah, man, that is just tough.
But there's something really significant about that.
That was a column written by a guy named Philip Schultz
who was a Pulitzer Prize winner.
So that really kind of reveals the fact that
what they figured out through decades and decades
of research is that people with dyslexia aren't stupid.
They specifically have trouble learning to read
and spell and write.
And more and more research has kind of gotten
to the root of the problems with dyslexia.
But we have found that with patience and practice,
people with dyslexia can learn to read.
You have dyslexia your entire life.
There's no cure for it.
But you can learn to read
and you can learn to navigate and cope with dyslexia
as a child and into adulthood.
Yeah, and I don't want to,
certainly don't want to sound like I'm bagging on teachers
because both of my parents were teachers
and even back in the day when, let me just say this,
teachers back then didn't have the same tools
that they have today.
And they didn't have an understanding of dyslexia.
So if they had students that weren't keeping up
and would force the class to maybe lag behind,
they may not have made the best decisions,
but they didn't have all the tools at their disposal
to make better decisions.
Right, the presence of a kid with dyslexia in a class
creates a conundrum.
Do you slow the class down to that kid's speed?
And as far as like reading and spelling
and writing lessons go,
potentially risking like slowing down the rest
of the class who are learning at a normal clip,
or do you take this guy with dyslexia
or this girl with dyslexia
and put them in a special needs class
that may address their reading and writing,
but they're going to get so far behind their classmates
in every other subject that they're normally proficient at.
It's a problem and they had no idea
how to grapple with it for almost all of the 20th century
and multiple generations of kids with dyslexia
suffered as a result.
Yeah, it's really sad.
There are a lot of symptoms for dyslexia, key symptoms,
and these are very important
because there is no blood tests.
There is no, there's no, even,
I mean, there are a lot of testing they can do,
but there's no standardized specific tests
that will really nail it down.
Right, so keep that in mind.
There's no official definition of dyslexia.
Yeah.
And there's no specific tests to suss out dyslexia.
Right.
Two big problems.
So you got to look at this collection of symptoms.
The first obvious one is slow reading, inaccurate reading,
difficulty sounding out words,
difficulty pronouncing longer words with multiple syllables,
which we'll get to that in a bit.
Inability to read or speak made up nonsense words,
which I thought was interesting.
Poor short-term memory for verbal information,
whether it's written or spoken.
Poor spelling, like really poor spelling,
to where you sometimes can't even tell
what the words they're trying to spell are.
Right, not just like using an F instead of a pH
or something like that.
Yeah, and we should also point out too
that it's very much an incorrect notion
that if you have dyslexia, you just transpose letters
or spell things backwards.
That's what I thought for most of my life.
Yeah.
Dyslexia was people, they spelled things backwards
and that was that.
And that they also read backwards
and that they could train themselves to read things
backwards, totally made up.
It's not totally made up, but it's such a one component
of dyslexia that it might as well just be an urban legend.
Yeah, totally.
And then what this can lead to, it's not just like,
oh, I have trouble reading, that spills out
into all aspects of life, whether it's your self-esteem
or you might have problem with directions.
Directionally, you might have issue with your budgets
or money items or you might not can tell time very well.
Frustrated, anger, difficulty planning things.
It's not just limited to reading issues.
And then in real life, you might read something
and have very little recollection of what you just read.
You will probably have problems giving presentations,
finding the right word, recalling words,
that kind of thing.
When you do read and when you learn to read,
you will be reading slower than anybody else,
even reading at your reading level.
You just do it more slowly.
And then as an adult, a lot of people are like,
oh, good God, I'm done with school.
Let me just go off and find a job
that doesn't require any reading or any writing.
And I will be fine.
I will go to restaurants and order the same thing
at every restaurant.
And if this routine that I've developed
to mask my dyslexia is ever interrupted,
I will flip out and try to keep it under control,
but I will seem a little awkward socially
during instances like this.
There's ways you can carve out a life for yourself,
but you don't have to because now we understand dyslexia
way more than we did before
and we understand the treatment of it too.
Yeah, and as far as how many people have it,
it's tough to get,
because of all these reasons we're talking about,
tough to get a good number that's reliable,
but anywhere between five and 15 to 17%, it looks like,
which is sort of, no,
this is not the biggest range in the world,
but they don't really know.
No, they have no idea because there's a couple of problems.
One, there's a lot of people out there
who don't realize they have dyslexia.
And then there's a lot of people who do know
they have dyslexia and are either ashamed of it
or have just set up their life
to where they don't have time or room to go be diagnosed
and then go learn to overcome it.
They're just like, whatever, I have this thing,
this issue where I'm slower at reading than other people.
So yeah, it's probably very much under reported
and underestimated how many people in the population have it.
Yeah, and we're talking mainly about,
almost exclusively about developmental dyslexia,
which is the kind we mostly think about.
We're not talking about acquired dyslexia,
which can happen as a result of an injury.
Right.
So just want to point that out.
Well, let's take a break and then we'll come back
and talk about the history
that actually features both of those, okay?
Yes, sir.
All right.
All right, let's take a break and then we'll get back to it.
Back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends
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So Chuck, the first time the word dyslexia was used
was in 1872 by an ophthalmologist named Rudolf Berlin
who coined the term dyslexia.
But the case that he was describing
was a case of acquired dyslexia.
Where you can develop the symptoms of dyslexia,
trouble reading, trouble writing,
trouble sounding out words from a head injury
or say a lesion on your brain, something like that.
And that told them a lot, right?
It really, initially they thought
maybe it was just a sign of low intelligence.
Maybe it was a problem with vision or something like that.
But the fact that you could acquire dyslexia
told neurologists and ophthalmologists
working in the 19th century,
no, there's a neurobiological basis to this.
Yeah, and they called it early on in the 19th century
and I guess even in the early 20th century,
well actually they called it that up until the-
The 60s.
Yeah, the 60s, word blindness.
And it was a German who coined that term
and they called it Wart-Blindheit.
Can you say that?
That's good.
Okay, you would do it way better than me.
Well, I would put on some dumb voice
but that's perfect pronunciation.
Okay.
You said that it's a W, right?
Yeah.
And you said it is a V.
Yeah. Perfect.
Okay.
I didn't even click my heels together when I said it.
It checks out, Dorothy.
So they called it like you said up into the 60s,
congenital word blindness.
There were a lot of people in the late 1800s,
there were not a lot, but a handful of people
studying the stuff.
Yeah, Hinshelwood and Morgan were the two big ones.
Yeah, and they were an ophthalmologist and a doctor.
Hinshelwood was the ophthalmologist
and then there were also neurologists
a man named Samuel Orton and it's interesting to look back
because they were sort of on the right track
with what they thought was wrong.
Yeah, word blindness also as a term is not that far off.
Yeah.
I mean, it really does a good job describing the thing
because they're saying like there's some condition
that these people have specifically
because they're otherwise totally intelligent.
They're just, they have a problem with words,
with seeing words and recognizing them
like everybody else can.
Yeah, and it was obviously since the dawn of time
people have had this condition,
but it didn't obviously, if you think about it,
there are a lot of things that came along
that really brought it into the forefront.
Yeah.
Like printing.
World-wide spread literacy.
Yeah, newspapers and books and street signs and menus
like you were saying in a restaurant.
Yeah.
Like everywhere there's the printed word.
And all of this, as all of this started to emerge
in like the second half of the 19th century,
at least in the United States and in the West in Europe,
all of a sudden people who had dyslexia
suddenly became apparent.
Whereas before this, it wouldn't have been apparent
because there was no way for dyslexia to manifest itself.
People didn't walk around reading.
You weren't expected to learn to read and write as a kid.
You had to be like basically a monk
to learn to read and write
or part of like the aristocracy.
Now it became democratized
and public schooling became widespread.
And so as a result, dyslexia became a thing
for the very first time.
It's actually a relatively new condition
that was born out of the modern era.
Yeah, or if you were a kid back then
and they were trying to teach you to read and you couldn't,
you were just, they were like,
all right, well, I guess he's not a reader.
So get out to the factory of the field
and don't worry about it.
But that was what Morgan, like W. Pringle Morgan
and James Hinchelwood were doing
was they were the first ones to say,
wait, wait, wait, get that kid out of the field
because he seems otherwise bright to me.
He just is having trouble reading.
This might just be a thing.
So they were the first ones to say,
no, this is its own thing.
This isn't just being generally slow.
This is a specific learning disability.
Right.
Samuel Orton, the neurologist I mentioned,
he created the Orton Society in 1949.
They were researchers and teachers
trying to figure out like, all right,
we know this is a problem.
Now, how did we go about teaching kids like this?
And that eventually led
to the International Dyslexia Association.
But it really took until the, like the 1970s,
there was a book written by McDonald Critchley
called The Dyslexic Child.
And that's when things really started
to come to the forefront more.
Yeah, they started to realize, oh wait,
you can teach kids with dyslexia how to read.
So maybe we should start doing that.
Right.
And here are the symptoms and the signs of dyslexia.
And let's take it seriously in the general education system.
Yeah, and one of the interesting things
that they learned, they have learned over the years
is part of the problem, at least in the case of English,
is that it's a really tough language to learn.
Extraordinarily tough.
And it matters if you have dyslexia
when compared to Italian, it says English
has over a thousand ways to spell.
It's a basic set of 40 phonological sounds.
Italian has 25 speech sounds and only 33 ways to spell them.
So incidences of dyslexia, while they may be
the same technically in Italy,
kids don't have as much of a problem in Italy.
Yeah, like thinking about this,
so the short E sound, eh.
Eh.
You can spell it AI, as in said, EO is in leopard,
U is in berry, IE is in friend.
Yeah.
Okay.
English is so tough.
It is tough.
But what you're doing is when you're spelling those things,
you're encoding a sound, a phoneme is what it's called,
right?
Yeah.
And like you said, in English, we have 40 phonemes.
And when you spell, when you read,
you're encoding and decoding a phoneme
and we have attached phonemes onto specific things
out in real life, leopard, right?
If you can spell leopard, you can write down that word
and you can create a leopard in somebody else's mind's eye
by reading it.
Right.
This is all spectacular that we can do this,
but it's a totally human construct.
If you have dyslexia, you're the ground problem
that is the basis of your condition,
is you have trouble sorting through phonemes.
You have trouble with what's called phonological awareness
where you hear leh and pard as two separate distinct sounds
that you can learn to spell and learn to write.
You can't sort them.
Sometimes they run together.
It's a problem on the very basis of reading, writing,
spelling, the phonology.
You have trouble.
Your brain has trouble processing it and sorting it.
That's the basis of dyslexia.
So if you are a kid with dyslexia in learning English,
with as difficult as it is,
where there's all these different rules
for the same phoneme,
it's gonna be way harder than it is
in something like Italian like you were saying.
Yeah, and as a result, as you would imagine,
learning a second language if you have dyslexia
is really tough, but they have found
that Italian can almost be like a therapy.
A training camp for learning.
It's really interesting.
Yeah, because you learn,
oh, there's rules with certain things,
but these are really basic rules and they make sense.
So maybe now I can learn English a little more easily
with the expectation that the rules are structurally the same,
but they're just different for English
than they are for Italian in nuance,
but ultimately they're getting across the same stuff.
Yeah, the whole concept of language
and symbols, letters and words,
it's just fascinating to me, endlessly fascinating.
Yeah, because again, I don't want to harp on this.
And like the humans like creating this
and saying that thing over there,
if you draw these symbols in this order,
that's what that is.
See that leopard, and then the word leopard,
like it's just all fascinating to me.
It is because you're encapsulating knowledge
that can be shared later on,
it can be unlocked later on by anyone
who understands how to decode it in the same way.
Yeah, what's the science,
what's it called when you study that?
Linguistics.
Is it just linguistics?
I'm pretty sure.
I could have been a linguist.
Oh yeah.
If I had only known what it was called.
Yeah.
There.
I just realized half of you through that
would have dumbed on myself.
What's that thing called?
Yeah, I could have been good at that.
Yeah, yeah, it was on the tip of my tongue.
So I guess we can talk about the FMRI and the MRI.
Obviously, the Wonder Machine figures in pretty big
when it comes to this kind of thing.
And in the mid 90s is about when the FMRI came on the scene
with dyslexia and studies with dyslexia.
One of the problems was little kids,
you're like, oh, we can't throw them in there.
That thing will explode their brain.
And then they're like, oh no,
the FMRI machine is fine for kids.
We tested it out on some bad kids and they were fine.
And so they started putting children in there.
Cause you could obviously do this at any age,
but it's important for school age children
to like figure out what's going on in their brains.
Well, that's one of the reasons why
that's the sample population is because it takes years
for dyslexia to be prominent.
Every kid has problems learning,
reading and writing at first.
But then as other kids progress and this one kid doesn't,
but they're otherwise bright,
same socioeconomic opportunities and all that stuff.
That's when it becomes possible that they have dyslexia.
But by that time, a couple more years have gone by, right?
So you're not, you're not testing for dyslexia on babies.
You have to wait until it basically manifests itself.
Yeah. And of course with the FMRI,
they, I think there was some hope that it could,
like you mentioned earlier, just be like, well, there it is.
But, you know, it wasn't, it wasn't as they,
you know, different regions of the brain
would light up or not light up,
but they didn't get any hard like pinpointing conclusions.
No, they have kind of focused in on a few spots,
like different studies have said, this is what we found
and it actually correlates with other studies too.
There's left hemisphere areas,
the ventral occipitotemporal region,
the temporal parietal region
and the inferior frontal cortices,
which have to do with language processing,
but also visual processing of language too.
Yeah. So again, they think that the basis
of all of this is that when you're hearing sounds,
when somebody's holding up a piece of bread
that has been dried through heat and says toast,
you're hearing toast.
Yeah. And you can learn to write T-O-A,
it's a little confounding. Sure.
And then S-T over time,
maybe the first few times you write T-O-E, S-T,
it doesn't matter, you're going to learn to write T-O-A-S-T
and you can write it down
and then someone else can read it
and they think of toast. Right.
With dyslexia, you're not hearing toast.
You're, and you certainly can't extrapolate something
that you're not hearing correctly into words and letters.
Yeah, yeah. Okay.
That's a good way to put it.
The toast analogy. There you go.
There is a genetic component.
You are likely, if you have dyslexia,
to also have other family members who have it
and they have isolated some genes associated with it,
but again, they haven't been like, here's the cause,
let's just figure out how to switch this gene off or on.
Right. And I think it's just correlated.
It's not necessarily the cause.
It's like people who have been shown to have dyslexia
have this set of genes that are doing this.
Yeah, but like I said earlier,
what's interesting is those early doctors
weren't super far off. Yeah.
It does have to do with visual processing
of this linguistic information
and they were on the right track even way back then.
So not bad.
And then even still though,
with this new understanding of like,
okay, this brain region looks like this.
This brain region looks like that.
This is the sign of a dyslexic brain.
There's still the question,
is this the result of going years and years without reading?
Right.
Or is that the structure of a brain with dyslexia?
Right. Because we know that your brain changes
when you read, when you learn to read.
They've done studies in the MRI with illiterate adults
who have learned to read.
So they do a scan of them while they cannot read
and then they scan them again while they can read
and then look for differences in the brain.
And there are structural differences
that take place in the brain.
Which makes sense because it makes you think,
so an illiterate adult,
is that the normal structure of the brain
and an adult that can read,
is that an abnormal structure?
Because think about it, we've only been doing that
for 150 years.
That's a new construct.
So it makes sense that the brain would be neuroplastic
like that in that respect because that's a new thing
we've all started to try to do to alter our brains.
Yeah, and that's where the practice part comes in,
which we'll get to more,
but it's interesting that, and it sounds simple,
but the better, if you have dyslexia,
the better you get at reading and writing,
the better you will get at reading and writing.
Exactly, you're just, you're strengthening,
you're creating new neural connections
and then strengthening those pathways.
And the fact that it all comes down to apparently
patience and practice and that like,
it's saying like these kids with dyslexia
are going through the same thing that every kid does
with learning to read and write and spell.
It just takes them way longer.
The fact that generations of kids with dyslexia
were just abandoned by the school system
because of a lack of patience is really what it comes down to
is beyond sad to me.
Patience and resources, I think.
That's part of it, sure.
Yeah, I just don't want to sound like we're saying like,
teachers just were impatient about it all.
It's like, it was complex and still very sad.
Yes, the fact that teachers have to buy
their own school supplies still gets to me every year.
The fact that we're like living with this as a country,
like that's just become normal to us is embarrassing.
It's just a mark of shame on our country, if you ask me.
All right, let's take a break.
No.
I'm gonna give you your cat of nine tails
so we can flog each other.
I realize I sound really forceful in this episode.
I feel like I'm sounding forceful, do I?
Sound forceful?
No, I think you're great.
Do I?
Well, that did.
All right, we'll be right back, everyone.
Hey, yeah.
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
Yeah!
On the podcast, HeyDude the 90's called
David Lasher and Christine Taylor.
Stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude.
Bring you back to the days of slip dresses
and choker necklaces.
We're gonna use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews,
co-stars, friends, and non-stop references
to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting Frosted Tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL Instant Messenger
and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper,
because you'll want to be there when the nostalgia starts
flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling
of taking out the cartridge from your Game Boy,
blowing on it, and popping it back in,
as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to, Hey Dude, the 90s, called on the iHeart radio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
The hardest thing can be knowing who to turn to when
questions arise or times get tough,
or you're at the end of the road.
OK, I see what you're doing.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
This, I promise you.
Oh, god.
Seriously, I swear.
And you won't have to send an SOS,
because I'll be there for you.
Oh, man.
And so will my husband, Michael.
Um, hey, that's me.
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All right, so like you said earlier, there is no cure
for dyslexia.
There is treatment, and they even put that in quotes.
But you shouldn't think of it as a disease cure type of thing.
No, no.
It's practice and patience.
You have it for life.
Yeah, and those are the two strategies
that we will say it one more time for the 10th time.
Patience and practice, you have to have that patience there
as a parent, as a teacher, as someone with dyslexia.
I know it's frustrating, but the more patient you are,
give yourself time.
Teachers can, and there are programs now
where students can get extra time to take tests
and things like that.
And I think even officially, like with the SAT and stuff
like that, there are programs where you are not
put at a disadvantage.
There's the Individuals with Disabilities Education
Improvement Act of 2004, the IDEA Act, or IDEA.
It specifies dyslexia as a specific learning disorder.
And when you have a diagnosis of dyslexia,
the whole world opens up to you.
You all of a sudden have your own personal teacher's
assistant working with you.
Hopefully.
You have all sorts of resources that just weren't
available to you before that are being funneled directly
toward helping you learn to read faster.
Yeah, I wonder if that's across the board.
Yeah, I think that schools probably
have specific funding for IDEA stuff.
I mean, when Congress comes up with an act like that,
they fund it and then they fund it out of it.
Like those huge omnibus budgets have funding for that.
And that goes to the school.
And schools supposedly not allowed
to spend it on anything but that stuff.
So yeah, probably if you get a diagnosis of dyslexia,
it's pretty sweet and a huge relief.
Because all of a sudden, it's just like a brand new world.
You're taken away from the dumb kids table,
like Howard Schultz was.
And all of a sudden, you have your own one-on-one reading
and spelling lessons that you just didn't have before.
Yeah, the other, like we said, is practice.
And over time, you can learn to read.
And you make those new neural pathways.
And it's heartening to know that if you have this patience
and you put in the time, it is something
that can be overcome if everyone works together.
Right, and if you can learn to read even as an adult,
you're not going to learn to read necessarily proficiently.
I think you can if you really, really practice.
If you put your mind to it, it's going to be very slow,
but it's not like you'll never read a book
or something like that.
But I saw one woman describing her condition as an adult.
And she said she was very proud to be
at like a seventh grade reading level now as an adult.
Which is like, you can navigate through life
with a seventh grade, at a seventh grade reading level,
pretty easy.
Right.
The problem comes when you don't ever,
you've never gotten any help.
And you are basically an illiterate adult
because of dyslexia.
Yeah, they have, technology now can help out their,
what they call assistive listening devices.
Because sometimes, if you have someone
who you're reading something out loud,
while you're reading along, sort of like a teacher in an app,
like that one-on-one experience,
that can really, really help.
Seeing a transcription sometimes,
of what someone's saying can really help.
A real-time transcription, yeah.
So all these apps and devices
are really helping things along this phase.
It's like a brand new world for kids with dyslexia
compared to like last century.
Or even a few decades ago, you know?
Yeah, the one thing I didn't quite get
was this thing that you sent from Sir Jim Rose.
I didn't fully get what this guy was saying.
He was part of it.
So he's not saying this.
He's definitely all into dyslexia.
But there is a thread of experts
in childhood education, psychology,
childhood cognition,
who suspect that there's no such thing as dyslexia.
Really?
That those earliest neurologists and ophthalmologists
and doctors who named it and made it a thing were wrong.
And that really an inability to read
transcends any level of intelligence.
It's disconnected from intelligence.
That no matter whether you are of high intelligence
or low intelligence,
you can suffer from an inability to learn to read.
And so if you have dyslexia and you are of high intelligence,
the kid next to you who has low intelligence
and can't read also has dyslexia.
Or there's, or else no one has dyslexia.
And it's just an inability to learn to read.
Most experts say dyslexia is a thing,
which means then the debate is,
okay, does it have anything to do with intelligence?
And if it doesn't have anything to do with intelligence,
then all of these resources that are being diverted
to these kids who are of high intelligence
but are having trouble learning to read
is really doing a disservice to the kids of low intelligence.
And I'm making air quotes here, everybody.
Who are having trouble learning to read?
Why differentiate?
They're both having trouble learning to read.
Start attacking the problem with both of them.
And there was this one Australian expert
who basically said, yes, dyslexia is a thing.
It is his own thing.
It has a neurobiological basis.
It's not made up.
It's not a myth, but let's treat first
and then diagnose later.
If you see an inability to learn to read,
go after that.
Don't say, well, is it dyslexia?
Let's test the kids intelligence.
It doesn't matter.
Let's just try and help.
Focus on learning how I'm teaching them how to read.
Interesting.
And apparently interventions.
There's this guy named Julian,
Professor Julian, what's his name, Chuck?
Lenin.
Sands.
Yes, Julian Sands.
In boxing, Helena, he has a big soliloquy
about whether or not dyslexia is a myth.
I can't remember the guy's last name,
but I get the impression that parents of children
with dyslexia are not a big fan of this guy.
But he's basically said we're diverting a lot of funding
away from kids who don't know how to read
just because they supposedly don't have a high IQ.
Let's treat all the kids.
So that's the idea of whether it's a myth.
Not that dyslexia doesn't exist,
although I think some people suspected it didn't for a while.
Now people believe it does,
but not necessarily that it's just intelligent
upper middle class kids who have dyslexia.
It's just an inability to read for the same reason.
Interesting.
That's the basis of it.
It's still up in the air and it's a really touchy subject.
Very touchy subject.
For sure.
And rightfully so.
I mean, I can imagine you feel lost in the woods
if there's no official diagnosis,
there's no official test of it,
there's no official definition of it,
but your kid has it and you know your kid has it.
I can't imagine why it must feel like
to have some expert going like,
there's no such thing as dyslexia.
Right.
You know?
Yeah, yeah, thanks a lot.
It is very touchy and rightfully so.
Well, finally, there's this whole notion that
if you have dyslexia, then you may excel in other areas.
You may be more creative
or you may be more prone to be like
an entrepreneur perhaps.
Yeah, cause you think outside of the box.
Yeah, I mean, there's a long list of people
like famous creative types that have dyslexia.
Agatha Christie, did you know that one?
I didn't, but.
I didn't either.
That, you know.
I didn't just make it up.
I learned that.
It's a long list.
But just recently.
Part of this bugs me though.
I don't know, I just hate it when they're like,
well, look what celebrities have this thing.
I mean, I get it maybe that it might,
I don't know, I just don't see the value in that.
Well, it's saying like, look at this guy,
this lady may be, I guess so.
She's not a street sweeper.
You don't have to spend,
you don't have to look forward to a life
of shoveling horse manure because you have dyslexia.
You can achieve, just stick to it, kid.
No, I get all that.
And that's valid.
Oh, you're questioning the cult of celebrity?
Yeah, that's what I was, that just sort of bugs me.
But no, there is benefits.
I'm sure if some kid was like,
Tom Cruise has dyslexia?
Right.
And look at him.
I mean, I have had some questions
about Xanax and its value myself.
Oh goodness.
There have been some studies though over the years
that may or may not support this.
Like supposedly if you have dyslexia,
you may be quicker to find something
in your peripheral vision.
Maybe you can like MC Escher style drawings
or the impossible images, hidden images.
You might see those quicker or more easily.
Find patterns in noise.
Sure.
Like you could be a great data analyst perhaps.
And they think like, and this makes total sense,
but the problem is it's anecdotal at this point.
But it makes total sense that,
yes, the same senses that you are using to read and write,
if you don't know how to read and write,
your brain's going to compensate with other things,
it's going to possibly excel at other stuff,
just because it's structured different.
If your brain is structured differently,
which we know that's the case,
if you do not read or write,
you would expect that it would manifest itself
in real world behaviors and traits.
Well, yeah.
And the first thing I'll thought is like, yeah, totally.
Like if you're vision impaired, you hear things better.
Well, supposedly that's a myth.
Well, I looked it up.
There are studies where if you are vision impaired,
you are better at pinpointing like location of sound
and certain sounds, but it's not as-
You can't hear something two miles away.
Yeah, it's not as cut and dry.
It's just like you hear better,
because like your ears develop better.
You know, if you remember that guy who can echolocate,
he's visually impaired.
And he's like, he uses clicks or something like that,
like a bat.
He basically taught himself to echolocate.
Really?
Amazing.
The first thing I thought about was the guy with the ear
in his arm.
What was his name?
Stelarc.
Stelarc.
What's great.
Oh man, I love that.
You and I like go back and forth on remembering
the guy's name.
Last time we brought him up, I didn't remember his name
and you rattled it right out.
Stelarc.
Between us, Stelarc is going to live forever,
like the transhuman is to you.
But then that lasting about being entrepreneurial
or maybe a corporate executive,
they did do a study in 2009 that found there was a
anecdotal evidence of Oprah representation in those fields.
But then that's the thing too, where they're like,
maybe they were just better at overcoming adversity.
Oh right.
And that stayed on through their whole life
to where it wasn't just dyslexia,
but like nothing would keep them down.
So they excelled.
Right, they learned how to try harder than their peers.
Yeah.
Even if that is the case, great.
Sure.
But the point is, is it's still anecdotal.
So you have to be careful with saying like,
oh yeah, people with dyslexia are way better at this.
Or they're more likely to be entrepreneurs.
It's just, it hasn't been settled yet.
But I think the overall point of this episode is,
if you do have dyslexia, there is plenty of hope.
Do not give up hope.
Whether that your kid has dyslexia or you have dyslexia,
you can learn to read and write and spell,
and you can become a Pulitzer Prize winning columnist.
Or Agatha Christie.
Yep.
Or John Irving I saw has dyslexia.
John Irving?
Yeah.
Richard Branson, that was really good.
Ozzy Osbourne for God's sakes.
Look at that guy.
Sure.
Fumbling around the house.
He's successful.
Yeah.
Despite himself.
Uh-huh.
If you want to know more about dyslexia,
you can learn all about it on the internet.
And since I said that, it's time for Listener Mail.
I'm going to call this Sid and Marty Croft email.
This guy wrote in to email us about a personal connection
he had to the Schoolhouse Rock episode.
I'm not going to read that half of the letter
because I don't want to further embarrass the family.
But he has a relation to the person
that we kind of called out as the guy
who ruined Schoolhouse Rock.
Oh, okay.
Wasn't he an exec?
Yeah.
But the second half of this says,
speaking of unbelievable stories, guys,
I thought you'd be jealous to know that I grew up
hanging out on the sets of all the Sid and Marty Croft shows
because my mom was on a bunch of them.
Used to have lunch with the Slee Stacks
and throw around big foam boulders from Land of the Lost.
She was Nashville on the Captain Kool and the Kong show,
which wrapped around the Saturday morning cartoons.
I remember that.
They also, that also led to the music group,
the Bay City Rollers showing up to my birthday party.
What?
When I was like five, it caused such a big mom scene,
the police had to come.
That's the S-A-T-U-R-D-A-Y.
No, you know how they got their name?
They threw a dart at a map and it landed on Bay City, Michigan.
Yeah, because they're like Scottish, aren't they?
I think so.
I think they are.
I remember my sister, we had a babysitter
and then my sister and the babysitter,
I don't know why my sister wasn't just my babysitter,
she was six years older.
There was another girl who babysat
that was basically my sister's age.
And they would sit around,
this is my big memory of the Bay City Rollers,
there was one of their albums that had each of their pictures
sort of in a dartboard-like fashion and a circle.
And they would spin the record around
and close their eyes and stop it with their finger.
They had to make out with that picture?
Yeah, they had to kiss that picture or whatever.
Oh, I hope your sister doesn't listen to this.
It's great, the 70s, man, so innocent.
I love the 70s.
So, Bay City Rollers came to his birthday party,
they called the cops.
She went on, my mom went on to do a ton of cool stuff
that I'm sure you guys would know.
Bunch of episodes of Plastic Man.
Wow.
All the women's voices on Celebrity Deathmatch.
Cool.
Hosting a game show called Rodeo Drive,
playing Joan Rivers on Family Guy.
Wow.
Being in the Catskills on Broadway for two years.
Too much more to mention, guys,
except also she went on the road with Tim Conway
and Harvey Corman for a number of years.
Posing as Carol Burnett.
My little brother ended up engaged
to Harvey Corman's daughter.
Wow.
But it didn't work out.
Wow.
Anyway, love the show, guys.
If I can ever be a resource, let me know.
That is from Keith Orrell.
Keith, that was amazing.
You remember Celebrity Deathmatch?
Yeah, man.
It's so great.
Big shout out to your mom, too.
Yeah.
And to your mom's husband.
Pick up to your mom's, Keith.
Yeah.
Well, if you want to brag on your mom
because she's done some awesome stuff,
we love hearing about that.
Mom's always have great welcome-ness here
at Stuff You Should Know.
That's right.
That's going to end up being a crummy t-shirt.
If you want to get in touch with us,
you can hang out on stuffyshadow.com
and check out our social links there.
I have a website called thejoshclarkway.com.
You can get in touch with me there.
And you can get in touch with me, Chuck and Jerry,
and everybody else here at Stuff You Should Know
by sending an email to StuffPodcast
at howstuffworks.com.
For more on this and thousands of other topics,
visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called, David Lasher
and Christine Taylor, stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker
necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point,
but we are going to unpack and dive back
into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends
to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hey, I'm Lance Bass, host of the new iHeart podcast,
Frosted Tips with Lance Bass.
Do you ever think to yourself, what advice would Lance Bass
and my favorite boy bands give me in this situation?
If you do, you've come to the right place,
because I'm here to help.
And a different hot, sexy teen crush boy bander each week
to guide you through life.
Tell everybody, yeah, everybody about my new podcast
and make sure to listen so we'll never, ever have to say bye,
bye, bye.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio
app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to podcasts.