DIY disorders

7 Replies

I recently stumbled upon a website that claimed that 80% of people who can’t read have a problem the website’s authors call “optilexia”, or sight-reading, characterised by:

  • Lots of guessing, particularly of short words,
  • Being able to read a word on one page, but not the next,
  • Transposing one word for another word with the same first letter,
  • Very poor spelling,
  • Poor comprehension,
  • Very weak word attack skills for new words.

If you google “optilexia”, you’ll find 6440 entries, and I guess this post makes that 6441. However, I think the term “optilexia” is very much surplus to requirements.

We already have a medical-sounding word for this common cluster of difficulties: “dyslexia”, and even that term is slightly problematic.

Is optilexia a real Thing?

The definition of dyslexia has always been somewhat contested – basically it is a failure to learn to read despite adequate vision, hearing and intelligence, and having been taught in the same way as everyone else (more on this in a minute).

You can’t take a blood test or have a CAT scan to check whether you have dyslexia, it is diagnosed from your behaviour and by eliminating other possible causes.

This is a very common way to get a medical diagnosis – for example, Autism Spectrum Disorders and most mental illnesses are diagnosed from behaviour.

The ground rules most commonly used in Australia for this sort of diagnosis are set down in the American Psychiatric Association’s Diagnostic and Statistical Manual, currently in its fourth edition. DSM-IV includes dyslexia as a diagnosis, and so does the World Health Organisation’s International Classification of Diseases.

However, DSM-V comes out in May this year, and although we won’t know precisely what’s in it till then, it seems likely that dyslexia won’t appear as a distinct disorder.

The people who write the DSM don’t just get together one weekend and scribble it on the back of an envelope – there is a long and complicated process involving examination of years of scientific research, a huge number of experts, public consultation etc.

So it’s not really kosher for self-designated experts on the internet to make up new, medical-sounding disorders like “optilexia”.

Sight reading (the key behaviour exhibited by “optilexics”) is taught in schools

Schools routinely teach children in their first years of schooling, including children with poor phonemic awareness, to memorise frequently-used words, and to tackle unfamiliar words by looking at the first letter, looking at the picture and guessing from context.
In many or perhaps most schools, words are not routinely broken down into digestible sounds and spelling patterns for the many children who are unable to do this for themselves.
If schools actively taught children with lactose intolerance to drink lots of milk, then when they got sick, said they had “dyslactia”, there’d be an outcry, and probably lots of litigation.
Given what scientific research has resoundingly shown about how to teach reading and spelling well, I think there are some parallels here.

Let’s label the source of the problem, not its victim

Terms like dyslexia and optilexia feed into the idea that there is something intrinsically wrong with a learner, but often the learner’s unhelpful behaviours have been actively taught and conscientiously learnt, while more helpful behaviours and strategies have not been taught.
Sorry for repeating myself on this topic if you’ve been reading this blog for a while, but in West Dunbartonshire in Scotland, they were able to stamp out illiteracy by high school entry, using a combination of fast-and-first synthetic phonics, followed by intensive group work for those not catching on, followed by 1:1 intervention for those still struggling in the later years of primary school (you can read the research report here).
This study supports the view that dyslexia, optilexia, problexia and any other reading problems you care to make up may be either preventable or respond well to quality intervention, and that often the problem lies with the teaching system, not the learner.
It is not OK to know you’re doing something that causes a lot of preventable misery, and not stop doing it.
If we need a medical-sounding word for the problem described by “optilexia”, I think the best one is “dyspedagogia”, applied to the system that fails to equip all literacy teachers to teach all students effectively, in accordance with the proper, scientific research.
No, I didn’t make the term “dyspedagogia” up, and I’m not sure who originally did, but I wish I had. I just googled it and got 586 results. Sadly, not as many as optilexia, but with a concerted effort perhaps we can change that.
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7 responses to “DIY disorders”

  1. Maggie D says:

    I tried googling 'dysteachia', which is the same thing as dyspedagogia.  2,130 results.  Encouraging?

    • alison says:

      Hi Maggie, I’m not so keen on the term “dysteachia” because I think it could be taken to mean that teachers are the problem, whereas most of the teachers I know are hardworking, diligent, well-intentioned people, but they have been fed a steady diet of constructivism and Whole Language, often including quite a lot of anti-phonics information (or I’d call it misinformation).

      This starts at university but continues in inservice training. For example I had a meeting with a regional literacy consultant and some teachers the other day, and the consultant was actively and determinedly anti-phonics, anti-decodable books and determined to promote the gospel according to Marie Clay, including the things that the average person in the street finds bizarre, such as the idea that children don’t have to learn their letters before they can use them to read and spell.

      In the middle of all this, the teachers were nice and polite to both of us, but essentially just wanting to drill down on what would help their kids learn.

      So I think the problem is the pedagogy, not the teachers, and we should be careful of using “dysteachia” in case people think the “teachia” bit means “teachers” rather than “teaching”.

  2. Tas says:

    Hi Alison,
    I’ve been following you for a while now, I love your videos and articles, they are so informative and it’s helped me so much with my 7yo struggling readers. We’ve just spent 4 months doing the EasyRead System and my daughter is finally reading, with comprehension. I was just going through some of their modules that I didn’t do (I mainly used what I learnt from your Facebook posts lol), just so that I could get my extra value for money haha… and came across this “Optilexia” which I thought I would google because funnily enough, I had never heard of it. And this page was one of the top results in Google.
    I just thought I’d mention that we had so much success with the EasyRead system which you show in your screenshot, it’s a shame that they had to coin a phrase for something that simply put, is the non-attention to phonics in the classroom, at the time when they really needed it. But also, the visual guided characters that were used have really helped my daughter where she is now confidently reading. I feel like we really needed something like, and that now we are ready to graduate to the more complex instructions that can be found on your website (which I’ve spent some time downloading prior to reading this page today). Anyway, just some feedback. Looking forward to the next step in our journey. Thank you for providing all the resources you do, they are so valuable to me, especially as we just started homeschooling this year (7yo twins yikes!).
    Cheers
    Tas

    • alison says:

      Hi, I’m not familiar with Easyread, and I found some things on their website worrying, but I’m glad it worked for your child, and good luck with the twins! All the best, Alison.

  3. Tas says:

    *inattention, even…

  4. […] DIY Disorders such as optilexia, which I prefer to call dyspedagogia. Read more … […]

  5. […] DIY Disorders such as optilexia, which I prefer to call dyspedagogia. Read more … […]

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