The National Center for Learning Disabilities
The National Center for Learning Disabilities
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The Advantages and Disadvantages of AI for Individuals with Learning Disabilities
As part of NCLD's Exceptional Things Continue to Happen Benefit Luncheon held in November of 2023, NCLD hosted two panel discussions "Exploring the Impact of AI on Individuals with Learning Disabilities," moderated by James D. Basham, Ph.D., Professor at the University of Kansas.
This first discussion on "The Advantages and Disadvantages of AI for Individuals with Learning Disabilities" features: Ericka Rovira, Ph.D. Professor of Engineering Psychology at the United States Military Academy, West Point; and Eleazar Vasquez, Ph.D., Professor & TJEEI Director and the University of Central Florida.
Просмотров: 495

Видео

Discussion: Ethics, Safety, and Future of AI for Individuals With and Without Learning Disabilities
Просмотров 1803 месяца назад
As part of NCLD's Exceptional Things Continue to Happen Benefit Luncheon held in November of 2023, NCLD hosted two panel discussions "Exploring the Impact of AI on Individuals with Learning Disabilities," moderated by James D. Basham, Ph.D., Professor at the University of Kansas. This second discussion on "Discussing the Ethics, Safety, and Future of AI for Individuals With and Without Learning...
Highlights from NCLD's Benefit Luncheon
Просмотров 383 месяца назад
Exceptional Things Continue to Happen at NCLD, and we are so grateful to all who joined us for our annual benefit luncheon in November of 2023! The National Center for Learning Disabilities' (NCLD) mission is to ensure success for all individuals with learning disabilities in school, at work and in life.
The Four Pillars of NCLD
Просмотров 583 месяца назад
The National Center for Learning Disabilities' (NCLD) mission is to ensure success for all individuals with learning disabilities in school, at work and in life. OUR PILLARS The National Center for Learning Disabilities (NCLD) is a non-profit organization focused on building community, sharing resources, and shaping policy to help individuals with learning and attention issues. Fueling the Disa...
The Path to Success for Students with Specific Learning Disabilities
Просмотров 3225 месяцев назад
An SLD is a brain-based disorder that affects an individual’s ability to read, write, and do math (e.g., dyslexia, dysgraphia, and dyscalculia). This overview explains current gaps within our public school system and what we can do to ensure the success of students with learning disabilities.
Exceptional Things Continue To Happen! NCLD's 2023 Highlights
Просмотров 2035 месяцев назад
Join us to reflect on the highlights and accomplishments NCLD made in 2023 for our community of individual with learning and attention issues. From fostering community to advocacy, exceptional things continue to happen! The National Center for Learning Disabilities' (NCLD) mission is to ensure success for all individuals with learning disabilities in school, at work and in life.
Building Student Success Systems to Support Students with Disabilities (Video 3 of 3): Systems
Просмотров 2448 месяцев назад
The third of three thematic videos on Building Student Success Systems, this video demonstrates that once we have shifted mindsets and built appropriate knowledge, we are ready to build an effective holistic system to bridge the deep ravine of opportunity gaps. Watch this video to learn more about how we can make structural changes to existing frameworks to better support students with disabili...
Building Student Success Systems to Support Students with Disabilities (Video 2 of 3): Knowledge
Просмотров 2158 месяцев назад
The second of three thematic videos on Building Student Success Systems, this video demonstrates that in addition to shifting mindsets, building knowledge among teachers, administrators, caregivers and all other parties is essential to building effective student success systems for all. Watch this video to learn more about what knowledge is required to successfully support students with disabil...
Building Student Success Systems to Support Students with Disabilities (Video 1 of 3): Mindsets
Просмотров 1518 месяцев назад
The first of three thematic videos on Building Student Success Systems, this video demonstrates that shared mindsets is the first step to changing outcomes for students with disabilities. Mindsets must shift before knowledge can be obtained to develop a holistic and effective system of support, so that we can ensure students with disabilities have success in high school and thrive after graduat...
A Pathway to Change: Building Student Success Systems to Support Students w/ Disabilities (Snapshot)
Просмотров 2229 месяцев назад
Student Success Systems focus on holistic ways to close the ravine of opportunity gaps to ensure students receive exactly what they need to succeed. The intersection of disability, race, ethnicity, and poverty put high-school students at an even higher risk for dropping out. Students with disabilities often find themselves in a ravine of opportunity gaps. The current siloed system isn’t working...
An Introduction to Building Student Success Systems to Support Students with Disabilities
Просмотров 2169 месяцев назад
Student Success Systems focus on holistic ways to close the ravine of opportunity gaps to ensure students receive exactly what they need to succeed. The intersection of disability, race, ethnicity, and poverty put high-school students at an even higher risk for dropping out. Students with disabilities often find themselves in a ravine of opportunity gaps. The current siloed system isn’t working...
A Conversation with Dr. Jacqueline Rodriguez, Chief Executive Officer
Просмотров 23110 месяцев назад
Reflecting on her first several months with NCLD, Dr. Jacqueline Rodriguez, Chief Executive Officer of the National Center for Learning Disabilities, shares her vision for the next few months of 2023. Learn more at ncld.org.
LD Day of Action
Просмотров 25911 месяцев назад
LD Day of Action is a time for our young leaders to unite to raise our voices, share our stories, and fight for what matters! Young adults from around the country will meet in Washington, DC, to urge Congress to co-sponsor and support bills that will help students with learning disabilities and attention issues.
A Look at Our 45th-Year Anniversary Benefit
Просмотров 224Год назад
The National Center for Learning Disabilities' (NCLD) mission is to ensure success for all individuals with learning disabilities in school, at work and in life.
Hannah Olin - 2022 Educator Everyday Champion Award Winner
Просмотров 284Год назад
Hannah Olin is the 2022 Educator Everyday Champion Award Winner. She continues to provide inclusive environments for those with learning and attention issues to thrive. The National Center for Learning Disabilities' (NCLD) mission is to ensure success for all individuals with learning disabilities in school, at work and in life.
Joseph Rosen - 2022 Administrator Everyday Champion Award Winner
Просмотров 278Год назад
Joseph Rosen - 2022 Administrator Everyday Champion Award Winner
Zomara Lee - 2022 Anne Ford Scholarship Recipient
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Год назад
Zomara Lee - 2022 Anne Ford Scholarship Recipient
The National Center for Learning Disabilities: Celebrating 45 Years
Просмотров 339Год назад
The National Center for Learning Disabilities: Celebrating 45 Years
Josephine Olson - Clueing People In on Learning Disabilities
Просмотров 414Год назад
Josephine Olson - Clueing People In on Learning Disabilities
Cassidy McClellan - Advocating for Yourself Even When The Odds Are Stacked Against You
Просмотров 149Год назад
Cassidy McClellan - Advocating for Yourself Even When The Odds Are Stacked Against You
Mental Health is On Our Minds: An Open Letter
Просмотров 236Год назад
Mental Health is On Our Minds: An Open Letter
Athena Hallberg - My Journey with Learning and Attention Issues
Просмотров 699Год назад
Athena Hallberg - My Journey with Learning and Attention Issues
Rudy Karthick Bhuvaneswari - Creating Environments for All Students to Succeed
Просмотров 371Год назад
Rudy Karthick Bhuvaneswari - Creating Environments for All Students to Succeed
A Conversation about the Mental Health Needs of Students with Learning Disabilities
Просмотров 1,4 тыс.Год назад
A Conversation about the Mental Health Needs of Students with Learning Disabilities
Planning Your Future: A Young Adult's Experience
Просмотров 399Год назад
Planning Your Future: A Young Adult's Experience
A Conversation with the Arizona state House Congresswoman Representative Udall
Просмотров 2442 года назад
A Conversation with the Arizona state House Congresswoman Representative Udall
The National Center for Learning Disabilities - YALC Women's History Month Panel
Просмотров 5172 года назад
The National Center for Learning Disabilities - YALC Women's History Month Panel
Celebrating Forces for Change - NCLD 2021 Benefit - Governor Thomas Kean
Просмотров 2642 года назад
Celebrating Forces for Change - NCLD 2021 Benefit - Governor Thomas Kean
Celebrating Forces For Change - NCLD 2021 Annual Benefit - Meredith O'Connor
Просмотров 3122 года назад
Celebrating Forces For Change - NCLD 2021 Annual Benefit - Meredith O'Connor
NCLD 2021 Allegra Ford Thomas Scholarship Winner
Просмотров 3062 года назад
NCLD 2021 Allegra Ford Thomas Scholarship Winner

Комментарии

  • @lovelymayhem9851
    @lovelymayhem9851 14 часов назад

    I’m dating someone and I’m here simply because somethings he does I consider rude, but he’s not rude, he’s extremely polite and kind. He will rush me while we are in a restaurant, and I forget he’s simply over stimulated.. which is okay.

  • @florisvandenberg7424
    @florisvandenberg7424 День назад

    For the majority of my life i felt there's something wrong with me and i needed to change. Then i realised i'm an Aspie and something clicked. Now i can accept me for who i am. There are benefits of being Asperger too, you know.

  • @godskiwi1
    @godskiwi1 5 дней назад

    I had to watch this three times, I honestly couldn't stop reading the subtitles which are kinda hilarious. The actual video content is super helpful, I had no idea about dysgraphia until recently.

  • @apunktspunktkpunkt4271
    @apunktspunktkpunkt4271 9 дней назад

    The length of this video is super ! I wish there would be an short explainatory Video for the Asperger-Spectrum differentiation/distinction between Male/Female Aspies... I've been never officialy diagnosed as one myself, but watching this: Some subjects tick a box/ring a bell, but not all... And liking to be on my own, but never feeling 'alone' in one sense - is that so bothersome for 'Neurotypicals' ?

  • @1985JM
    @1985JM 11 дней назад

    I really struggled with maths at school but people think all people on the spectrum are genius because of movies like Rain man & mercury rising . I was diagnosed at age 17

  • @googlefirstnanegooglelastn1203
    @googlefirstnanegooglelastn1203 12 дней назад

    The physical and mental pain of undiagnosed disgraphia. I find it ridiculous and infuriating that I was never diagnosed. Watch the clip and I have every single symptom of disgraphia. Never knowing what to write about, where to or how to start a single word. Intern what choice did I have but to never write. Creative writing 😱 I would sooner climb a mountain jump out a window and runaway. In fact I did just that in year 8 yes straight out the classroom window. I could copy from a book or from the blackboard I preferred that even with the pain in my hand it was the 80s after all boys to be men had to know pain and live with it. Pain was to be endured a right of passage and enjoyed. Something I got used to forgetting about it's existence and not only physical pain all pain was more or less absent just normal. Hidden from the world to see. A pain I still know and couldn't hide from myself was my frustration never know what to say and in a timely manor that I could only wish for. The only escape was to never talk to people at all trying to feel normal and nothing for anyone or yourself like it didn't exist. Masking never works out well in the long run especially for reasons you never you never know. The irony for me is that I tested with an above average vocabulary. Frustrating to say the least a knowledge of words I struggle to use and spell having dyslexia. Listening to people paid off but why have a voice when you can't use it in the way you would very much like. Cruel and unusual punishment I wish but this is school for so many of us.

  • @MrLeihuK
    @MrLeihuK 15 дней назад

    U don’t know anything about Asperger’s syndrome. I have it and I know how it feels and how it affects me

  • @andreagulikova2493
    @andreagulikova2493 18 дней назад

    i have asperger's syndrome

  • @JMBPro
    @JMBPro 18 дней назад

    I went to speech therapy when I was younger, they were trying to test me for autism but at the time it was a very unfamiliar condition which caused me to be treated the same way as people with autism but on a completely different level were treated, making feel like I was incapable of doing things when I could do the stuff, it was just their interpretation and lack of understanding that was the problem, mixed with my inability to communicate and express myself

  • @user-rr3ho8dz6k
    @user-rr3ho8dz6k 22 дня назад

    Wow I’m amazed that you’re saying this certain because I have so many ideas because I have dyslexia and I’m very intelligent and I’m very creative I am a genius and I cannot wait till my book is finished until all the brilliant ideas that Jesus Christ gave me oh yes there needs to be assistance from every age group and I’m a child development specialist and I work with children with autism and different learning disabilities and youth and adolescents hallelujah make sure it’s affordable and is free to help them and help us I’m excited it’s about time wake up everybody I’ve been awake for a long time and I’m excited all right here we go let’s do this❤🙇🏽‍♀️🙏❤️💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻💃🏻🦾

  • @user-rr3ho8dz6k
    @user-rr3ho8dz6k 22 дня назад

    Wow

  • @matthew-dv8gv
    @matthew-dv8gv 23 дня назад

    A lot of people don't understand that having a learning disability can be a dangerous condition for anyone who has it. Trust me it's hard because I have a learning disability myself. It gets hard to learn new things and do it at a normal/fast pace like the average Joe. I had trouble learning to do basic math growing up, and I struggled to write good sentences that would make sense or be readable. It's even worse if you are depressed and not motivated to learn new things, it's gonna be hard to learn a niche or a skill in a certain field. Having a learning disability really is a curse in our American society or anywhere else. Anyone who has this disability did not ask for it during birth. We wish we didn't have it, but we can't get rid of it, so we just have to accept the fact that life is gonna be tougher, and it's just a fate we need to accept.

  • @northupupgrages09
    @northupupgrages09 23 дня назад

    Oh my goodness this comments section..... I'm in a pile of tears... I began to have the MOST trouble in 3rd grade. Now seeing these symptoms in my child is just awful. Here to learn more!!! ❤

  • @Pruffin334
    @Pruffin334 23 дня назад

    Amanda Seals brought me here with her interview with Shannon

  • @willsokolski1957
    @willsokolski1957 24 дня назад

    When you say the matter of Empathy can be a concern for those with NVLD, do you mean that, like folks with Aspergers, there are situations in which they cannot figure out that they might be supposed to approach a specific scenario with empathy? Or do you mean that they are more likely to be jaded through repeated negative outcomes in social outreach attempts, becoming less empathetic learned helplessness ?

  • @zilvoxidgod
    @zilvoxidgod 24 дня назад

    The spacial stuff's a real problem, and I have ocd which also affects it, it's a wonder I can drive at all.

  • @TemitopeAdeEnisuoh
    @TemitopeAdeEnisuoh 27 дней назад

    Thumbs up...Quite inspiring

  • @blin019
    @blin019 29 дней назад

    Sir i want to share my son life as dyslexic not only about him as a mother i would like to share my experience my failure my helplessness for my son on social media but how ? I dont know please help me to talk.

  • @DerekPK
    @DerekPK 29 дней назад

    Everyone has Asperger. This is just stupid.

  • @SayWhatYouNeedT0Say
    @SayWhatYouNeedT0Say Месяц назад

    This list is so broad that it seems like every person I know, including myself, fits in one of those descriptions.

    • @racheltan5829
      @racheltan5829 27 дней назад

      For someone to fit the descriptions, majority or many of these traits should apply to you. If it’s only one or two, it’s highly unlikely. Add on that most people would not exhibit the behaviours mentioned here. If many apply to you, perhaps you present some traits of Asperger’s. You could check with your friends and family on the way you interact socially with them. You might be surprised.

  • @SymphoniasStories
    @SymphoniasStories Месяц назад

    @LdOrg could you please do an update on this? Also would be great if you could do a video about overlap between Austism Spectrum Disorder, NVLD, ADHD and other neuro-developmental disabilities?

  • @angeliqueartiedaleal
    @angeliqueartiedaleal Месяц назад

    I hate it when they say "that's very simple you are just lazy", how insensitive they are! 💔😭

  • @mandlin4602
    @mandlin4602 Месяц назад

    Dyslexic and AD half of ADHD lol. It’s a huge spectrum I am high (superior range) general intelligence but severely dyslexic and my short term working memory is borderline (meaning almost at a level it would be considered a full disability). I’ve known mildly dyslexic people with better memory than me, but below average intelligence. And it’s very weird, so I perform in dyslexia impaired tasks and repetitive (tasks that are impacted immensely by my memory and attention deficits. Plus dyslexia) at the same level as someone with a lower IQ and mild dyslexia. Sometimes they do better than me making less small errors. All my errors are memory errors, focus and small set like writing the correct number or word. Ticking the correct box, accidentally skipping lines when reading and missing out information. Mixing up numbers if I have to write more than 4 numbers. But, once tasks become complex and you have to manipulate information and ideas I outperform everyone I know. Even neurotypicals. I have the knowledge and can make new things, I just can’t be a robot. It means neurotypicals are left wondering why I keep making basic mistakes inconsistently but then seem more intelligent than them. Why I failed most of my schooling but I understand and come up with solutions for things consistently. Why does the girl who sees your problem and fixes it within moments keep not clicking “submit” on systems? She must be complacent, lazy, careless and doesn’t care. I do care it’s just my brain ain’t about that life, let me just fix complex things you can’t work out and you can keep dotting the is and crossing the t’s. Deal? Lol

  • @kathythureen9341
    @kathythureen9341 Месяц назад

    I HAVE A LEARNING DISABILITY ALSO AND IT HAS CAUSED ME NOTHING BUT GRIEF AND SORROW.

  • @sleepybones5726
    @sleepybones5726 Месяц назад

    As a quite high functioning asperger diagnosed very young, I have a perspective that some might find fascinating. I'm a total layman so you'll have to excuse the blunt/crude language. Also editing on my phone, so sorry for terrible grammar. I feel like, from my perspective, I can understand normal people's social interactions fine. I fully process the facial expressions, gestures, tones, sarcasm, etc. Have no problem with tone or literality. With minimal conscious effort, I can hold a normal conversation pretty well, most people I know didn't know I had aspergers till I told them I do, i'm just kind of "a bit eccentric" to most people. Some people for multiple decades. I feel like this "aspergers dont understand social interaction" paradigm can also be framed as "normal people don't understand the way aspergers people think". To put it bluntly, if a "normal" person talks to me, i know how they behave socially by default, and I can pretty easily emulate that and talk "like them", even if it's artificial to an extent. But when I use my "default mode of communication", so it were, my "direct line from the brain to the mouth", to a "normal" person, it's almost like they're incapable of "thinking in the same way" as me. I find it incredibly difficult to try to convey my thoughts in a way non-aspie people can understand. I usually need to use proxies like diagrams, or explain extensively WHY this nuance of a nuance connected to 30 things is important. I find that in conversation with other aspergers, I don't have this problem much. And funnily enough, neither do I with ASD people. Which fascinates me. This is my unfiltered perspective, I thought someone might find it fascinating. I also don't think that aspergers is some kind of magic thing that makes me better or anything like that, to me it's "the invisible force that makes you like programming, card games, and gangster movies." Non-social stimulation stuff honestly really bothers me, like sound, noise, etc. But i grew up kind of thinking everyone else was also equally annoyed by this stuff, so I convinced myself to put up with it, it's not too bad. I'd rather street lamps be 50% more annoying than be allergic to milk I guess.

  • @user-ps7fz5xy3u
    @user-ps7fz5xy3u Месяц назад

    Holy crap I knew before watching this that I had it but I didn't realize I had nearly *every goddamn symptom* jeez

    • @DerekPK
      @DerekPK 29 дней назад

      Asperger doesn’t exist. This guy just described how all humans acts. It’s just totally stupid.

  • @Payton_Jordan1997
    @Payton_Jordan1997 Месяц назад

    Anyone with dyscrapia. Or ADHD or PTSD. Do not let it slow you down. I'm in college on my pre-health. And my professor lets me use a laptop. He knows about my dyscrapia. I'm going to be a paramedic. I was diagnosed at a young age and I have a normal IQ just a learning disability. I'm I am Street smart but when it comes to writing. I'm not that good in English due to, my dyscrapia. But I was always the head of my class in math. I always got straight A's and 90% marks.

  • @Payton_Jordan1997
    @Payton_Jordan1997 Месяц назад

    I work at my own pace. I have ADHD. I used to get Ritalin as a kid. I was diagnosed with dysgraphia in AD and ADHD. And now I have PTSD due to almost being shot. My house was shot up. I live in a bad area where shootings are normal. The ghetto if you'll call it. My printing is really bad in writing. It sucks having dysgraphia. Now my doctor put me on, Biphentin's.I find that it helps. As a kid, I sucked at English but was always good at math.

  • @himachalpradeshgayangangay5868
    @himachalpradeshgayangangay5868 Месяц назад

    👍👍👍

  • @philipdalton1000s
    @philipdalton1000s Месяц назад

    ruclips.net/user/liveJSWgyIIG89Q?si=ZQrPnHbC09Zdxjqo

  • @jeankelly1030
    @jeankelly1030 Месяц назад

    Could you clean up the captions? This video seems to be auto-captioned which is in accurate at times. Plus, there is not punctuation. Thanks.

  • @garypranzo9334
    @garypranzo9334 Месяц назад

    When I was 7 circa 1974 I was told I had ADHD and given Ritalin so my inability to write was attributed to lack of attention and laziness. Circa 1980 I was told I had Graphic Dyslexia. I only heard it called Dysgraphia a few years ago. In the 70s and 80's it was an issue but post-2000 the only time it comes up is when the Doctor's office gives me forms to fill out. I would have my wife or my daughter do it . The other time is when I get the check at a restaurant or need to write a bank check. My wife does those things for me.

  • @AmericanHorse-sg9oc
    @AmericanHorse-sg9oc Месяц назад

    I just saw an article that states scientists have found that some people are able to take in information 88% faster than others. Yeah, it's called being Dyslexic and having superpowers. I can believe that the world education system has not figures out that our brains work faster and more efficiently. We basically hate and filter out beaurocracy, hesitant thinking. We get straight to logic and take a sound risk to learn the next steps towards perfection. God forbid that a hunch of fellow Dyslexic Einsteins (as he was) are right next to everyone that could fix the world in a slight moment. It's such a shame we can't be the for many generations.

  • @northyland1157
    @northyland1157 Месяц назад

    When they say Aspergers is on the same spectrum as autism.. I highly question it. Asperger's are highly functional... Autism is a sever mental handicap with almost no function. Why are we not allowed to question this connection? I am Aspie, but nothing like autism. I 100% disagree.

    • @DerekPK
      @DerekPK 29 дней назад

      Me too. What a heck does Asperger and Stockholm syndrome have to do with stupid autism??

  • @jesusislord8895
    @jesusislord8895 Месяц назад

    This is bull crap, their is nothing wrong with children that you talk off, the problem is the government because they expect every single person to learn the same way, but in reality people don’t, and you call an alternative way of learning as difficulties, and why is that, because it easier for schools to teach everyone the same, I left school with no reading skills and no grades, at 21 I learned myself to read and was doing university studies because the way I learn was easy, and could learn quite fast, I did primary, secondary, university off my own way of learning, it not a learning disability, it’s just a different way of learning and if teaches understanding is only one way to teach, they have a teaching disability to teach every child, and by telling a child you struggle in this and that area, is in fact holding them back, and making them believe they have struggles with learning, when they are quite capable in the way they need to learn, it’s something to think about, it’s ok to be different

  • @DarkAngel-cj6sx
    @DarkAngel-cj6sx Месяц назад

    My son regressed into autism at 3 and now his speech is coming back, but he has a hard time to articulate now

  • @MrMfloor
    @MrMfloor Месяц назад

    Why didn’t kids have these problems 100 years ago? Is it cell phones? Too much stimulation? Vaccines? Something changed in our society.

  • @martinlutherkingjr.5582
    @martinlutherkingjr.5582 Месяц назад

    So basically a learning disability is a defect in a person’s brain that only impairs a narrow area of ability? What is it called if this brain defect affects of a broader range of things?

  • @mhaas281
    @mhaas281 Месяц назад

    My wife says I have this. But I feel normal. I don't usually feel awkward. I tell it like it is and I'm good at sports mainly road cycling and running. And I do have emotions and empathy. But I tend to have a bad sense of humor or sometimes say things that others might consider inappropriate or badly timed.

    • @DerekPK
      @DerekPK 29 дней назад

      Asperger doesn’t exist. People can grow out of this thing called Asperger, people are not born with it. People could get this behaviour called Asperger after going through a traumatic experience.

  • @maryc.grider2691
    @maryc.grider2691 2 месяца назад

    ❤❤Read Anthony William. Mercury & aluminum poisoning is the culprit. Hawaiian spirulina and cilantro every day with organic fruit. Avoid dairy, gluten and processed sugar.

  • @Steppid
    @Steppid 2 месяца назад

    I hope this dude has learned more by now. This is a pile of crap.

  • @BresheaD
    @BresheaD 2 месяца назад

    50/50 rare alittle on the You mixide truthfully incredibly intelligent but different way most do not know how to understand deal with ..no real way Think low iq or actually high iq as said very gifted..really pose to seek private school or private academy so grow into withbother comfortable like.

  • @joaoalbertofn
    @joaoalbertofn 2 месяца назад

    I’ve ever seen someone describe me so well.

  • @Deeznutz503
    @Deeznutz503 2 месяца назад

    my parents and teachers KNEW that I had this, and still they punished me for it. I think they were trying to push me to be normal, or something akin to that. it made everything so much worse.

  • @phoenixkali
    @phoenixkali 2 месяца назад

    What is the name for those in the last category? The ones that need round the clock care? I worked in care in the community house in the nineties. It’s a neurological disorder that also manifests physical symptoms like twisted bowel and coeliac disease, and no medication in the world can make it go away. They are mostly childlike in mental age and can hardly grasp their own name despite what autism means. Most people hate keeping the autistic term suffer from social anxiety caused by systematic isolation in last two generations relying on gadgets for company. I’ll probably receive a lot of hate comments but I want to know the up to date term for those needing round the clock supervision.

  • @tashyonnajuilen
    @tashyonnajuilen 2 месяца назад

    I was in regular class but my teacher told me that I need more help

  • @yuy389
    @yuy389 2 месяца назад

    would of been nice to know this 5 years ago

  • @Catlife738
    @Catlife738 2 месяца назад

    My weaknesses is handwriting.I can’t read it ,most of my teachers can’t,and it’s been the exact same since kindergarten (and no I still dont get to type assignments)

  • @ectobeing
    @ectobeing 2 месяца назад

    I just learnt this exists, while searching if there is any connection between bad handwriting and ADHD. I struggled with handwriting a lot even though I’ve always been advanced with reading. I am good at talking about topics and any sort of presentation or discussion has been easy and fluid for me, but trying to write on a topic was always extremely difficult, I’d always end up doing a lot worse on essays and written tests than in-class stuff. My teachers always called me lazy for being advanced in everything besides handwriting, blaming me for not wanting to do better in this one area. Basically I’m really happy to find out this existed. I no longer feel crazy for struggling oddly in this one area.

  • @nightowl480
    @nightowl480 2 месяца назад

    This was the best explaination I've ever seen. Now I finally understand. You write the way my brain wants to read stuff. Thank you.