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Dyslexia in the Workplace: Disability or Talent?
Home :: Business :: Management
By: Richard Whitehead Email Article
Word Count: 859 Digg it | Del.icio.us it | Google it | StumbleUpon it

  

In the UK, dyslexia is covered by the provisions of the Disabilities Discrimination Act, and meaningful protection is afforded to dyslexic thinkers through this means.

However, is the disability framework for understanding dyslexia actually harming dyslexic interests rather than furthering them?

Essentially, there are four distinct challenges involved in creating a dyslexia-friendly workplace, each of which needs to be addressed comprehensively in order to create a workplace culture in which diversity of thinking style can be comfortably accommodated - and harnessed to the creation of commercial success.

First, there is the issue that, as we discovered through our NOP-commissioned research last summer, around 2 million adult dyslexic thinkers are not aware of their dyslexia. This is most likely the result of poor diagnosis a generation ago, but also of lack of clarity around what exactly dyslexia is.

There is a huge need for employers' awareness training that is not clinical, but rather gives a direct and subjective experience of what it is like to be a dyslexic thinker - so employers can start to use their intuition to determine when an employee may be a dyslexic thinker, and provide appropriate help.

Secondly, all the dyslexia support in the world will be of no avail to an employee who is frightened or ashamed to own up to being a dyslexic thinker. In our organisation, we have worked with dyslexic adults who had never told anyone about their dyslexia, who woke up with repetitive nightmares about "being found out", and who felt it was easier to "come out" as gay in the workplace than as dyslexic.

And this is the problem with a legal framework that classifies dyslexia as a disability - it intensifies rather than alleviates the immense stigma around dyslexic thinking. We have spoken to dyslexic students who refused to apply for the Disabled Student's Allowance because they were so horrified by the name. Let's not underestimate the psychological effects of calling a bright and gifted thinker "disabled".

The elephant in the room is that dyslexia is not a disability, but a thinking style. Dyslexic thinkers excel in visual-spatial tasks involving whole-picture thinking and finding original and creative solutions to things. In 2003, the BBC's Mind of a Millionaire series commissioned a research piece into the thinking style of British millionaires and discovered that 40% of those polled were dyslexic thinkers. A more recent study by the Cass Business School established a 35% correlation between dyslexia and entrepreneurism in the US.

The disability framework for dyslexia is a convenience, but a harmful one. It is a convenient way of assuring protection to dyslexic thinkers in the workplace - at least on a superficial level. It is convenient for employers and educators because it does not require us to become curious about the dyslexic thinking style and explore its potential.

Yet this is where the disability framework is harmful. For the third challenge that we face in the workplace is creating an environment where dyslexic thinkers can grow their skills. Disability support is essentially a series of props that presents precisely that from happening - because disability theory preassumes a person will never be able to master a certain skill.

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The Learning People specialises in the Davis approach to dyslexia and sees dyslexia as a gift. http://www.thelearningpeople.co.uk UK residents can sign The Learning People's Downing Street petition to reclassify dyslexia as a thinking style, not a disability. Further detail at http://www.dyslexia-gift.org.uk

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