In 2019, a grassroots campaign led by parents succeeded in passing a wave of dyslexia legislation. Many states mandated hallmarks of the Orton-Gillingham method, specifically calling for “multisensory” instruction, to help students with dyslexia read and write better.* In New York, where I live, the city spends upwards of $300 million a year in taxpayer funds on private school tuition for children with disabilities. Much of it goes to pay for private schools that specialize in Orton-Gillingham instruction and similar approaches, which families insist are necessary to teach their children with dyslexia to read. But two recent academic papers, synthesizing dozens of reading studies, are raising questions about the effectiveness of these expensive education policies.
Leading Dyslexia Treatment Isn’t a Magic Bullet, Studies Find, While Other Options Show Promise
by Dan DeMarle | Jan 8, 2023 | Dyslexia, Learning Disability, Special Education, Teaching, Teaching