SparkTop Sheds Light On Learning Disabilities

May 25, 2009 by admin  
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Joe Hornaday
Greensburg Daily News

Greensburg Elementary third, fourth and fifth graders learned that it was okay to learn differently at the “Show Your Spark” event at the school on Wednesday.

The program taught the kids about learning differences like attention deficit disorder and dyslexia, and provided information on the Website www.sparktop.org, which is free to kids and teachers. It talks about ways of learning, provides suggestions and provides a place to create things like paintings, music and games. SparkTop is one of the largest free educational Web portals in the country, program coordinator Bob Levy explained.

The Website features comic strip icon Garfield and teens with learning difficulties. It offers strategies and tips for dealing with homework and social interactions and helps kids recognize their unique strengths and talents.

On hand to help the kids understand the program and Website was “Spark Rob,” who talked about his personal battle with dyslexia beginning in first grade. When he began to notice he was having problems, he said his “flight or fight” response kicked in and he hid assignments and avoided work. It would have been best, he noted, to have told his teacher right from the beginning instead of running away from his problem and hiding homework.

“If you have a problem, share it,” Spark Rob encouraged the kids.

When he was confronted in elementary school about his learning disability, he explained to his teachers and parents that he simply could not write what he knows. He later found out that he had a superior intelligence, but dyslexia was stopping him from utilizing his full potential.

Once the problem was identified, Spark Rob began to work with different teachers and used different methods, but remained embarrassed about his difference and worried what his friends might think if they were to find out.

When he finally did let his friends know, it turned out to be a non-issue. Looking back, Spark Rob said he wished he had a tool like SparkTop when he was a kid.

Before the close of the program, Spark Rob broke through two pieces of wood using only his fist. He told the kids he was able to do so because he concentrated on the solution to pass through the problems in his way.

“No two brains spark alike,” he said.

SparkTop.org was originally created by Schwab Learning, formerly a program of the Charles and Helen Schwab Foundation. In January of 2008, the Professor Garfield Foundation was selected to take care of the SparkTop.org site. Professor Garfield is a joint collaboration between creator Jim Davis, Ball State University and Davis’ creative studio, Paws, Inc.

Memories are Bittersweet for Advocate Mom

May 14, 2009 by admin  
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Memories are Bittersweet for Advocate MomA mother and son share memories of their 20-year campaign to help him achieve success, in spite of severe dyslexia.

 

By Martha Langston, Rob LangstonFor 20 years, Martha Langston and her son, Rob, were a team on a mission to help Rob succeed in school, in spite of his severe dyslexia. But it didn’t always feel like a very well organized campaign. Martha, especially, often felt like she was just taking things one step at a time, making it up as she went along, running into unforeseen obstacles, and occasionally reaching the point of despair.

 

Today, at age 36, Rob is a motivational speaker and author, who specializes in helping people overcome internal obstacles to reach their goals. He graduated from a four-year college with a degree in art and graphic design. In recent years, he has formed his own company, written a book, worked as an artist, and spoken to as many as 20,000 school children, college students, and business executives annually. The story of how his family helped him cope with his disability and overcome the terrible isolation he felt as a child with dyslexia is now part of the message of hope he brings to others.

A Six-Year-Old “Under Cover”“When I speak at school assembly programs,” Rob says, “I think it’s crucial to tell kids to ‘tell on themselves’ if they’re having problems learning. I didn’t start getting help until second grade because I hid the problem so well.” Like many kids with learning disabilities (LD), Rob had found creative ways to hide his dyslexia, such as making trips to the restroom during read-aloud time, memorizing the readers used in class, and cultivating playground friends who would let him copy their tests.

 

Martha stumbled onto Rob’s secret one day at the end of first grade when she asked him to read aloud — just for practice — the 40 words on the first-grade mastery list his teacher had given them. After an entire year in the advanced reading group, Rob could decode exactly two of the words: “A” and “I.” Martha readily admits that she panicked. “I thought, my gosh, this child has been in first grade all year and he hasn’t learned anything.”

In the style that would characterize the next 20 years of advocacy on behalf of her son, Martha immediately went to friends and family for support. “I relied strongly on friends,” Martha says, “like when we moved to Conyers (Georgia), Rob ran around with a group of kids in the neighborhood, and I played bridge and socialized with the mothers. Because he was so smart, the friends he gravitated towards were all in the accelerated classes. I told all the mothers about Rob’s dyslexia; that, even though he couldn’t read, he wasn’t dumb. So, by the time Rob told his friends about it, I’m sure they already knew from their mothers.

“I was so consumed with all of it,” Martha adds, laughing, “that I talked about it whether I wanted to or not.”

Soon after Rob’s reading problems were discovered, Martha learned from her mother-in-law that Rob’s father, Smoot, had also had trouble learning to read and had been labeled “mirror eyed” in fourth grade. Shortly after that revelation, Martha’s mother called to tell her she’d heard two doctors discussing dyslexia on the Phil Donahue show, and that the symptoms they were describing sounded “very familiar.” Martha sent for transcripts of the Donahue program, and the family finally had a label for what they were dealing with.

Mom on a MissionAll Rob’s immediate family supported him in various ways to cope with his learning disability. Martha would later discover that Rob’s older brother, Lon, was also dyslexic, though less severely so. Although Rob’s father and brother chose not to make their reading problems “public,” Rob was inspired by knowing that both had overcome these difficulties to become successful businessmen. Rob’s younger sister, Natalie, read his textbooks aloud to him all through his schooling, and defended him from teasing.

 

The first tutor Martha hired to teach Rob to read, during the summer before second grade, gave up after a few months, saying he’d run out of strategies. The teachers she approached at school were more than willing to make accommodations for Rob, but were not able to help him learn to read. He was pulled out of English daily during elementary school for reading instruction, received tutoring at the county education office weekly, tried several special schools, traveled out of state to work with LD experts, walked on balance beams, read text on colored paper, did eye exercises, and was privately tutored every summer from first to eighth grade. At the end of middle school, Rob was still reading at a third-grade level.

“Rob has managed to get past the pain of that time,” Martha says. “Somehow, he’s been able to turn it around. But all I remember is the pain. We were driving home from middle school one day, and he told me he’d failed a test. He started crying and said to me, ‘All I ever wanted to be was smart.’ Well, here I am bawling, and he’s bawling. And I said to him, ‘Rob, we’re going to get through this. Some way, we’re going to get through this. When you get out of school, nobody will ever ask you what kind of grades you made. If you have friends and learn to do something (to earn a living), you’re going to be fine. But you’ve got to get through school.’

“A girlfriend of mine once told me that I should never let Rob see me cry,” Martha adds, “that I should be strong for him. But I thought, he doesn’t need me to be strong, he needs me to understand.” In Rob’s estimation, Martha achieved both. “She’ll tell people she just operated on instinct, but she got it 99% right. She was unequivocally on my side,” he says, “whether I was right or wrong, and she always worked it through to get to the solution.”

Empathy Leads to Advocacy

Martha slowly began to realize, as she helped Rob cope with school, that her unwavering empathy for his learning difficulties came partly out of her own learning struggles. “I told Rob recently that the reason I was probably a good mother for him was because I really understood his problems,” she says. I remember in fifth or sixth grade trying to memorize things like the state capitals. I absolutely could not learn them. My mother would say, you’re a smart girl and you can do this. And, of course, I would never talk back to my mother, but I knew I couldn’t do it. So when Rob said he couldn’t learn something, I believed him.”

Martha’s empathy carried over to her son. As a high school student with a learning disability, who was also a popular jock, Rob operated in two very separate worlds. His outgoing personality and athletic skills allowed him to hang out with popular kids, in spite of the stigma generally attached to LD. But his special education classes, located in a converted janitor’s closet, served kids with a very different social standing. “I had friends from the janitor’s closet who didn’t have LD,” Rob recalls. “Some of us had ADD, some of us had parole officers, and some of us had physical disabilities. I remember one girl in a wheelchair who had problems with motor skills and speech skills. Everybody was congenial to her, but no one took a second to actually know her. I became friends with her, and I talked to her in the halls. In a small way, I could kind of help her survive in the social ladder by doing that.

“It was a gift for me to learn empathy for the whole spectrum of kids,” Rob adds, “I was never scared of the scariest people in high school, because I was in the janitor’s closet with them. And I realized in most cases they were more scared than anybody else.”

Meanwhile, “behind the scenes,” Martha, who describes herself as extremely shy, was going to Individual Education Program (IEP) meetings; working with each of Rob’s high school teachers to help them understand his learning strengths and needs, and reading his textbooks aloud to him in the evenings. Although she recalls being scared to death and spending a lot of time crying in those IEP meetings, she also took a strong stand when necessary. When Rob was in ninth grade and the special education teacher proposed yet another reading remediation program for Rob, Martha put her foot down.
“I had not planned to say this,” Martha recalls, “but I just knew we couldn’t go through this any more. I told them, ‘I want you to teach him as if he were blind and just bypass his eyes.’” Citing the fact that he’d been taken out of English classes every year, missed important instruction, and hadn’t improved his reading, she refused to sign the remediation plan. After initially refusing her request, the district worked with her on a plan, which included having Rob take his tests orally.

Courage and Persistence Prevail over Fears
“Rob gives me far more credit in his book (For the Children: Redefining Success in School and Success in Life, 2002) than I deserve,” she says modestly, “because I was often just flapping in the breeze, scared all the time, not knowing what I was going to say in meetings, or what direction things were going to go.” What Martha sometimes lacked in confidence, she made up for in stubbornness and persistence, providing Rob some support even in college.

When Rob entered the State University of West Georgia in 1986, he became the first college student with a learning disability ever to receive support services there. “Mom and Ann Phillips (Ph.D., campus Student Disabilities Coordinator) and I all kind of trial-and-errored out the program,” Rob recalls. “Ann was on the phone all the time with Mom, getting her advice on what might be helpful (in the college setting).” Today more than 200 students with LD receive services at West Georgia, and the program that Ann, Martha, and Rob shaped became a model for other Georgia college campuses.

Rob’s not sure exactly where his career path will take him, but he is certain about why he has the confidence to pursue his dreams. “Family and teachers make the difference in whether a child with LD survives or not,” he says. “To make a difference in a young person’s life, you have to be there for a lot of it. So, I think the biggest factor in my success is my mom and dad being there for me — all the time.”

Now a seasoned veteran of LD “campaigns,” Martha is focusing her attention on her grandchildren’s generation, especially on the need for early identification of learning disabilities. “Young children want to please you,” she comments, “so when they’re not pleasing you with reading and learning, you need to look into it right away. If we could do that, I think we’d curb a lot of later problems.”
Asked if she has any words of wisdom to pass along to other parents of children with learning disabilities, Martha describes the principles that guided her: “Don’t let your child go out there alone; always be out there advocating for them. And don’t be afraid to go to teachers. I never had but one that wouldn’t bend over backwards to help Rob if I asked them to.”

April 2004
© 2008 GreatSchools Inc. All Rights Reserved. Originally created by Schwab Learning, formerly a program of the Charles and Helen Schwab Foundation

Living and Overcoming Learning Disabilities

May 10, 2009 by admin  
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Living and Overcoming Learning Disabilities

by Rob Langston

I spent many miserable years as a “handicapped” child and I have spent many wonderful years as a “successful” adult. Somewhere in between lies living and overcoming learning disabilities. The story I share in my book For the Children with regards to breaking through obstacles illustrates one such journey.

I’ll never forget that day in 8th grade when I misspelled my middle name. I wrote “Willaim” instead of “William.” It was a common mistake for someone with dyslexia, but my 8th grade teacher ridiculed me. He pointed out my error and said to the class, “I don’t know how any student can get to the 8th grade without knowing how to spell his own name.” The class laughed. I forced a half smile and sank lower into my chair, trying to look unaffected. Neither he nor the other students knew how humiliated I felt. Living with a learning disability often times means believing in yourself despite the good opinions of others. Creating a level of self-confidence that can withstand life’s more challenging moments is a gift. Developing this gift will serve you well all the days of your life. I chose to let this humiliating experience make me more determined to succeed, not less. It is in these moments that we decide to overcome or to be crushed.

Many years later, I was inducted into that school’s Teacher’ Hall of Fame for my work in helping children with learning disabilities. What if I had made a different choice that day? What if I had bought into the ridicule? What if I had chosen to not ever risk humiliation again? I’ll tell you. I would have never graduated high school or college. I would have never shared my stories of growing up with dyslexia with hundreds of thousands of children and I would have never written a book. The small measure of hope that people struggling with disabilities received from these things would have been lost and so would I.

There are two lessons here. One is to be careful what you say to children, because they are listening. The other is, that no matter how painful an obstacle is, it can be overcome.

I have not been able to fully overcome my disabilities in reading, writing and arithmetic. I have, however, been able to overcome how these deficits affect my perception of myself. Learning to overcome obstacles is just that— a “learning process”. Next time something challenges you in your life, just stop. Ask yourself “what power does this situation really have over me that I am not giving it?” Ask yourself, is there a way this situation can make you stronger or a better person? I think you will find, as I did, that overcoming a bad situation has more to do with your perception of yourself than the actual elements that make up the bad circumstance. Your reaction to situations is the only thing in your control. So take control and chose to make life happen for you instead of to you.#

Rob Langston is Chairman and CEO, For the Children Foundation and President, the Langston Company. He is the author of For the Children, Redefining Success in School and Success in Life. You can reach him by e-mail at rwltalk@mindspring.com.