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There are free infographic templates for a variety of subjects and uses to keep you coming back again and again. With eye-catching visuals and bold colors, these infographic templates increase engagement to help you better connect to your audience. This dynamic assortment of infographic templates is just what you need to make your presentations more persuasive and memorable. Spoiler Alert-there’s no evidence that visual problems cause dyslexia, no evidence that treatment for convergence improves decoding or comprehension, and no evidence that visual interventions remediate dyslexia or learning disabilities.Infographic templates bring your subjects to life The Southport CoLab and Florida Center for Reading Research created this fantastic infographic tackling common myths about dyslexia and vision. It should be noted that instruction for many skills that support writing also support reading comprehension.” I’d like to suggest a model that identifies the multiple components that are necessary for skilled writing-a similar ‘rope’ metaphor can be used to depict the many strands that contribute to fluent, skilled writing. With a nod to Hollis Scarborough’s famous “Reading Rope,” Joan Sedita has created the “Writing Rope.” In Sedita’s words, “ … significant attention is paid to the multi-component nature of skilled reading, while writing tends to be referred to as a single, monolithic skill. Originally, she spoke of skilled reading as resembling the “strands” of a rope, using pipe cleaners to illustrate the interconnectedness and interdependence of all the components. Hollis Scarborough-creator of the famous Reading Rope and senior scientist at Haskins Laboratories-is a leading researcher of early language development and its connection to later literacy. The genesis of the Reading Rope dates back to Scarborough’s lectures for parents on the complexities involved in learning to read. Access that graphic at her website, here. Nancy Young’s “Ladder of Reading” infographic shows the relationship between explicit instruction and learning to read.
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To download the report and infographic, click here and here. The National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities (NJCLD) advocates for “implementation of High Quality Education Standards (HQES) for all students, including students with learning disabilities.” NJCLD’s report, “ Learning Disabilities and Achieving High Quality Education Standards,” outlines five critical areas of attention to bring HQES to all students. Learning Disabilities and Achieving High Quality Education Standards Please join us in sharing the principals and infographic with your network. Join us in following NJCLD’s principles that should guide decisions that impact the lives of pre-K-12 and postsecondary students with learning disabilities. IDA unites with the other member organizations of The National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities (NJCLD) in ensuring that students with learning disabilities receive the services and supports they need to succeed.
Guiding Principles for Serving Students with Learning Disabilities During and After the COVID-19 Pandemic How Widespread Is Dyslexia? (February 2016) Most Reading Difficulties Can Be Resolved or Diminished (April 2016) What Is Structured Literacy? (Summer 2016) Also, please see additional infographics from colleagues in the field below.īeware of Education Promises Too Good to Be True! (October 2016) Please share our infographics and our fact sheets to raise awareness about dyslexia and to help support the policy and practice changes needed to bring effective instruction (particularly in reading) to every child with dyslexia in every classroom across the nation. IDA infographics help make complex information easy to digest, remember, and share and are made for a wide audience-both those individuals new to dyslexia and related literacy/learning issues and the experts.