After my last post I was kind of blown away at the response. I received messages from people, comments on facebook, etc. The common thread seemed to be "I am so glad you wrote that, it helped me..." It helped me know I am not crazy, it helped me understand what is going on with me, it helped me understand a different aspect of what I already knew I had.
A few things really struck me. 1. There must be a serious lack of resources out there if people are getting this kind of relief from a blog.
2. Dyscalculia has always been something I kept to myself, especially at work, during graduate school, etc. I was embarrassed, no one knew what I was talking about when I mentioned it, and I always felt uncomfortable, like I was doing something wrong by acknowledging it. But after that last post I realized, I need to acknowledge it. I need to do more than acknowledge it, I need to speak out about it, I need to write about it, and I need to offer what little information I can to help people who go through the same things as me.
And...
3. It seems like most of the resources are in the UK. They seem to do a pretty good job acknowledging this disability. The US however, is a different story. So...
I figured the first thing I could do is compile a list of resources. I am going to list them in order from resources for children to resources for adults.
Most of this information came from the National Center for Learning Disabilities. There is a wealth of information on their site, I just linked to some helpful first steps.
So first, let's start with Dr. Sheldon Horowitz @LD_expert, and his definition of Dyscalculia.
What is Dyscalculia?
Print Version
Common Warning Signs Pre-K to 2yrs
Common Warning Signs grades 3-8
Common Warning Signs grades 9-12
Common Warning Signs in College Age Students and Adults
HOW TO REQUEST AN EVALUATION this is for parents of school age children
Sample Evaluation Request Letter
Types of Tests to Assess for Learning Related Disorders
How Parents and Teachers Can Help Elementary Children With Math LD
The SAT and ACT for Students with Learning Disabilities
10 Helpful Dyscalculia Resources
APPs to Help Students with Dyscalculia and Math Difficulties
Learning Disabilities in Adulthood
Being a Spouse or Partner with a Learning Disability
Common Problems and Easy Solutions in the Workplace
Job Accomodations for People with Learning Disabilities
Risks and Rewards for Adults with Learning Disabilities
Managing Money if you have an LD or ADHD
The Advocacy Institute
Dyscalculia.org
Learning Disability Association of Michigan
Helpguide.org
It's a start, and I hope someone somewhere out there finds this helpful.
I think my biggest takeaway from the responses I received to my post was this...
We have got to tell our stories. We have got to tell our stories for a number of reasons. First, we need to tell them so that others can hear them and know they are not alone and that there is help. Secondly, we need to tell them so that people in the position to help are aware of the great need. Third, we need to tell them in order to advocate for ourselves and remove the sense of shame for something that is entirely not our fault, and that we have no control over. We need to tell our stories less as a form of commiseration, and more as a means of empowerment. We need to make some noise.
Basically what I am saying is this... every day needs to be Dyscalculia day, until every kid that struggles with it has the help he or she needs.
Just sayin...
Tuesday, March 5, 2013
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Happy Dyscalculia Day!
Parts of this post are reproduced from another blog that I used to write but have since abandoned |
As a result I have what is known as a "severe and profound" learning disability. It's called Dyscalculia. Some people want to simplify it and call it "Math Dyslexia," but it is more than that.
I have failed almost every math class I have ever taken. I have had difficulty with most sciences like chemistry and physics. I failed a lot of classes in school. PE was a nightmare, and forget any technical classes like shop.
English, reading, writing, theatre, comprehension, however, were a different story. I excelled in them, scored off the charts. I had an IQ test and scored very high. I was identified as gifted and talented, and put into gifted programs.
Because of this, all my life people have told me I am lazy and I just don't try hard enough. They compare what I go through to how much they hate spelling or algebra because its hard. This is more than hard. This is more than just your dislike of doing something difficult.
This is more than just a problem with numbers. I had bad coordination, I had a hard time riding a bike, I couldn't tell left from right (and still have to take pause and think about it when caught off guard), I had trouble making friends, I couldn't make change and was afraid to use money. I was often mocked and made fun of my math teachers who thought I was just screwing around. When called on in certain classes it took me a lot longer to reason my way to answers than a lot of the other kids. I was punished by my parents because I couldn't learn (and still don't know to this day) my times tables.
My real mother bought a deck of flash cards. She would show the cards and then yell at me for the ones I got wrong. She finally became so frustrated that she would hit me with a belt for every card I failed to get right. I got hit a lot.
My dad just couldn't understand why I couldn't get it. He told me I needed to apply myself more. He compared my inability to do math to his struggles in his calculus and trigonometry classes in college getting an aeronautics degree...
My stepmother really tried to help me. She would sit up with me all night sometimes, trying to do homework. Showing me the same problems over and over and over again. By the end of every session I might barely grasp the concept. The next night it was like I had never seen the problems before. She was patient, and I think I would have flunked out of school a lot earlier if it wasn't for her, but no one had ever heard of Dyscalculia at the time, so she just couldn't understand why the math wouldn't stick with me.
It got to the point where I would become physically ill and throw up when I was confronted with having to do math. I would ditch classes because they terrified me. I thought everyone was laughing at me. Everyone thought I was stupid, and so did I.
I didn't find out what the problem was until I was an adult and I got tested. This is AFTER dropping out of high school in the 10th grade, flunking out of my first year of college, flunking every math class, and failing my foreign language classes because once we got to the grammar portion I would lose it... it affects grammar processing too. As well as doing poorly in my minimum wage jobs, mainly working in situations where I had to handle money and was unable to tally things up correctly.
I love music but I never learned to read a note. I can't play an instrument, and I have tried, but Musical notes are math, and the theory escapes me. I have a good ear though... so good, in fact, that I managed to fool dozens of musical theatre directors into thinking I actually could read the score, when in fact I was just learning it by ear.
I learned all kinds of ways to get around my disability.
No one has ever heard of my problem, so I don't talk about it very much. When I do, I get looks like I am making it up, or just trying to find something wrong with myself. It is still hard to not give in to the idea that I just need to try harder. I love learning, I always have. I wasn't lazy, I was scared and confused. The thought that I am just not applying myself baffles me. I achieved a Master's Degree... with high honors. How the fuck harder am I supposed to apply myself?
With that being said...
Today is National Dyscalculia Day, and I feel I have an obligation to try to raise a bit of awareness. so I am posting this..
What is Dyscaluculia? Well...
From The Dyscalculia Forum:
What Is Dyscalculia?
The Basic Facts
Dyscalculia is a specific learning disability in mathematics. Dyscalculia is a word you use to describe when people have significant problems with numbers - but still have a normal or above normal IQ. It seems that no dyscalculic has problems with math alone, but also struggle with problems being able to learn to tell time, left/right orientation, rules in games and much more. (See the list of symptoms). Also, there are more than one type of dyscalculia, and all types demand specific learning methods aimed at the specific problem.
Is Dyscalculia Real?
Dyscalculics say it is. Teachers say it is. WHO and DSM say it is. See the bottom of this page for the official listings of dyscalculia in the medical world.
How Common Is Dyscalculia?
According to UK studies done by Gross-Tsur, Manor and Shalev in 1996, 6.5% are dyscalculic. According to studies done by Lewis, Hitch and Walker in 1994, 1.3% are dyscalculic while 2.3% are dyscalculic AND dyslexic - that means that according to this study 3.6% of the World's population are dyscalculic.
That gives a total of between 3.6 and 6.5% of the World's population. And again: That means, according to these two studies, that between 216.000.000 (two hundred and sixteen million) and 390.000.000 (three hundred and ninety million) people are dyscalculic - if we say that there are 600.000.000.000 (six billion) people in the world. No international study has been done on how common it is.
What Is The Male/Female Prevalence?
Although dyslexia seems to have a take on the male population (30% female versus 70% male), when it comes to dyscalculia studies show that the representation is equal - 50% female, 50% male.
Are There Types Of Dyscalculia?
Yes. Just like dyslexia, there are many versions of dyscalculia. Researchers have yet to come to a final decision, and they are not working together, which means that at least over 50 types have been given a name. We have guts here at the forum, so we have decided to stick with 4 types that make sense according to the forum users. These names are from a study done by Geary in 2004. You can read about the 4 types in the forums - there are subforums for each type, where we try to figure out all we can about the types.
Semantic retrieval dyscalculia
Procedural dyscalculia
Visuospatial dyscalculia
Number fact dyscalculia
Dys...Cal...Culia?
To pronounce it you say "dis-cal-cew-lee-ah". When a person has dyscalculia, you say that they are "dyscalculic" - "dis-cal-cew-leek".
The word dyscalculia comes from Greek and Latin and means "counting badly". The word "dys" comes from Greek and means "badly". "Calculie" comes from the Latin "calculare", which means "to count". The word "calculare" again comes from "calculus", which means "pebble" or one of the counters on an abacus. No one seems to know when the word "dyscalculia" to life - the earliest we have come across is this advertisement in The New York Times from May 1968. We do however know that researchers have used other words for what they found to be some sort of disability in maths (which they already found in the 1800s); arithmetic disability, arithmetic deficit, mathematical disability and so on. The media has been using words like digit dyslexia, number blindness and the obvious maths dyslexia.
Lots of variations of the word exist - Dyscalculi, discalculi, discalculia and so on. This seems to be spelling mistakes caused by general lack of knowledge about the disability, and the fact that no government has officially named the disability "dyscalculia", but instead goes by the WHO (specific disorder of arithmetical skills) and DSM (mathematics disorder) terms. Dyslexia is not officially named dyslexia either. In other words, dyslexia and dyscalculia are nicknames. It would be hard to say "specific disorder of arithmetical skills" every time you would mention this disability, wouldn't it?
"You Can Do It If You Want To!"
Probably followed by "and if you try hard enough". This is a typical remark from teachers and parents to motivate the student - and although it can be meant in the BEST way possible, it is not true when it comes to dyscalculic students. The thing a dyscalculic wants most in this world is to be able to understand those numbers. Dyscalculics need different learning methods, in every aspect of the assignment. Dyscalculics are able to learn how to calculate something one day, only to discover that the information has been forgotten the next day. In other words programs like Kumon, where repetition is a major part of the teaching methods seem to have no result for dyscalculic students - they forget. Through different learning methods aimed specifically at the student and his/her version of dyscalculia can have great results.
What Is Acalculia?
Acalculia is caused by serious brain damage. While it is possible to learn maths when you have dyscalculia, it seems impossible when acalculia is the problem - there simply is no understanding for numbers at all; not even the simple task of counting to ten. Acalculia is listed in WHO ICD 10 under R48.8. (corvid here, I am now starting to believe that I may have Acalculia).
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, otherwise known as DSM, is the standard classification of mental disorders used by mental health professionals in the United States and some countries in the Western world. It is published by the American Psychiatric Association. This is the official listing of dyscalculia in the DSM-IV;
Students with a mathematics disorder have problems with their math skills. Their math skills are significantly below normal considering the student’s age, intelligence, and education.
As measured by a standardized test that is given individually, the person's mathematical ability is substantially less than you would expect considering age, intelligence and education. This deficiency materially impedes academic achievement or daily living. If there is also a sensory defect, the mathematics deficiency is worse than you would expect with it.
Associated Features:
Conduct disorder
Attention deficit disorder
Depression
Other Learning Disorders
Low Self-Esteem
Social problems
Increased dropout rate at school
Here is a list of Symptoms, also from The Dyscalculia Forum.
You could take off the title "List of Symptoms," and just put my name at the top of the list, because every single one of these applies to me. When I was tested I was found to have 3 of the 4 types of Dyscalculia.
Normal or accelerated language acquisition: verbal, reading, writing. Poetic ability. Good visual memory for the printed word. Good in the areas of science (until a level requiring higher math skills is reached), geometry (figures with logic not formulas), and creative arts.
Mistaken recollection of names. Poor name/face retrieval. Substitute names beginning with same letter.
Difficulty with the abstract concepts of time and direction. Inability to recall schedules, and sequences of past or future events. Unable to keep track of time. May be chronically late.
Inconsistent results in addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. Poor mental math ability. Poor with money and credit. Cannot do financial planning or budgeting. Checkbooks not balanced. Short term, not long term financial thinking. Fails to see big financial picture. May have fear of money and cash transactions. May be unable to mentally figure change due back, the amounts to pay for tips, taxes, etc.
When writing, reading and recalling numbers, these common mistakes are made: number additions, substitutions, transpositions, omissions, and reversals.
Inability to grasp and remember math concepts, rules, formulas, sequence (order of operations), and basic addition, subtraction, multiplication and division facts. Poor long term memory (retention & retrieval) of concept mastery- may be able to perform math operations one day, but draw a blank the next! May be able to do book work but fails all tests and quizzes.
May be unable to comprehend or "picture" mechanical processes. Lack "big picture/ whole picture" thinking. Poor ability to "visualize or picture" the location of the numbers on the face of a clock, the geographical locations of states, countries, oceans, streets, etc.
Poor memory for the "layout" of things. Gets lost or disoriented easily. May have a poor sense of direction, loose things often, and seem absent minded. (Remember the absent minded professor?)
May have difficulty grasping concepts of formal music education. Difficulty sight-reading music, learning fingering to play an instrument, etc.
May have poor athletic coordination, difficulty keeping up with rapidly changing physical directions like in aerobic, dance, and exercise classes. Difficulty remembering dance step sequences, rules for playing sports.
Difficulty keeping score during games, or difficulty remembering how to keep score in games, like bowling, etc. Often looses track of whose turn it is during games, like cards and board games. Limited strategic planning ability for games, like chess.
____
Yep.. I definitely suck at chess.
I hate that I can't help my kids with their math. I hate that I struggle with things that come so easily to other people. I hate that I can go from seeming like an intelligent person to seeming like an idiot in about 10 seconds. It embarrassing and causes anxiety so severe that I get physically ill. I hate that no one NO ONE thought I had a problem. I hate that no one tried to help me. I hate that my love of learning was destroyed when I was a kid because of this. I hate that I could have achieved so much more if someone would have just recognized that I had a problem instead of writing me off as lazy.
If you are reading this and you know exactly what I am talking about, then get tested, help yourself. Once you know what it is, you can start to address it, you can understand, and start feeling better about yourself.
Happy Dyscalculia Day.
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