
Design vs. Dyslexia: UC Innovation Promises New Hope for Children with Dyslexia
Reading and retaining information. Thats the challenge faced by the one in five children who have some form of dyslexia.
Overcoming that challenge could soon become easier for educators and children thanks to pioneering design research from the University of Cincinnatis
College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning (DAAP).
In this video, UC's Renee Seward demonstrates and explains some of her concepts.
Renee Seward
, UC assistant professor of digital design, will present her innovative electronic project, titled Reading by Design: Visualizing Phonemic Sound for Dyslexic Readers 9-11 Years Old, at the
Southwest International Reading Association Regional Conference
in Oklahoma City, Okla., on Feb. 5, 2010.
She will likewise present her research project during the March 2010
International Technology, Education and Development Conference
in Valencia, Spain. (In Spain, Seward is scheduled to be a virtual presenter.)
In developing this toolkit to help educators more effectively assist children with dyslexia, Seward has developed an online tool that creatively employs sight, sound and physical movement to increase the reading and retention abilities of children aged 9 to 11 who have dyslexia. (A separate portion of the project employs physical tools and employs touch to aid educators and children.)
The project was inspired by the struggles of a friends child to read.
HOW READING BY DESIGN WORKS
In my work, said Seward, I want to
deemphasize the 26 letters of the alphabet and emphasize the 44 common sounds
of the English language. I do so by helping educators employ childrens senses, from the visual to the kinesthetic.
The key, she added, is knowing that dyslexia is
not
rooted in problems with visual perception. Its rooted in memory. Individuals with dyslexia have difficulty recalling and making a quick connection between a sound and the letter representing that sound.
The child is able to read the letter b. He or she is unable to quickly recall that we associate that symbol with the sound, buh. Thats dyslexia in a nutshell.
So, in the toolkit she is developing, Seward begins with the smallest units of sound and helps children associate them with letter forms. With the touch of a mouse, a teacher working with a child can scroll over the letter p, and the p will then morph to display common items associated with the puh sound: (peach, peppermint, pie, pea and piano).
Design for dyslexia project
The Reading by Design toolkit has a number of other activities:
- Sound elements and creative visuals working in concert to reinforce reading retention and recall (SEE VIDEO ABOVE).
- Common sounds like the ooohing of a crowd following a great basketball play (along with the visual of a basketball player making that play) depict and reinforce the connections between visual vowel combinations like oo and ew and their appropriate phonemic sound.
- Horizontal lengthening of words with long vowels to denote that vowel and the silent e (in words like note). The child can experience the lengthening word with a sweep of the mouse to the right, thus integrating movement into memory. (SEE VIDEO ABOVE).
- Also, when moving the mouse over long vowels, the cursor will not move up or down, only in a horizontal lengthening of the vowel to the right in order to visualize the phonemic value of that vowel. Again, the rightward sweep of the mouse also incorporates the childs arm movement into memory formation and retention.
- Silent letters appropriately take on a shadow form or repel the mouse.
- A cursor that moves just like a finger following the text (common to how most children read during their early years).
TESTING THE TOOLKIT
Seward likens her project to a parent holding a childs bike as the child learns to ride. Little by little, the parent is able to forego providing complete support and moves to an occasional steadying hand until, ultimately, the child is riding under his or her own power.
She explained, This electronic toolkit is a scaffold that can be built upon and then taken away.
Seward continues developing the project and is in the process of writing a grant application in cooperation with Allison Breit-Smith, UC assistant professor of teacher education, and Beth OBrien, assistant professor of educational studies, in order to begin user testing.
In developing the project, Seward has worked with the following specialists in order to obtain feedback:
- Susan Colberg, associate professor of visual communication design, University of Alberta.
- Educational psychologist Nilda Cosco, education specialist, North Carolina State University.
- Educational researcher Peggy Coyne, research scientist at the Center for Applied Technology, Boston, Mass.
- Joy Sykes Leonard, doctoral student, Carnegie Mellon University.
- Fletcher Academy, private school in Fletcher, N.C., specializing in teaching dyslexic children and those with ADHD.
- See the recent international rankings earned by UCs School of Design.
- Proudly Cincinnati: Design in the 21st Century.
- Apply to UCs digital design program.
- Get the latest news from UC.
- See more UC videos on YouTube.
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