Quote from: Joelene9 on December 27, 2012, 07:53:28 AM
I had to treat myself while in school. It was not known back in the 1960's. The first thing I got right was the spelling in elementary school then the reading, but the phonics I figured out later. But some of the number or alphanumeric combinations I do get wrong to this day. It was my Home Room/Astronomy teacher/counselor who discovered my condition in my senior year and helped me through my senior year.
Joelene
I was the same. At school in the 60s. I must have spent more time writing words with the correct spelling, over and over, than almost any other pointless activity. But still, words just don't work and when I tried to read long texts the words swirl around making little sense. It's a wonder I was ever educated at all. though to be honest, most of it came after I left school.
The first time it was suggested to me was a guy at a disablement resettlement centre who noticed I sometimes put letter in the wrong order and sometimes back to front. He taught me quite a lot about writing and numbers, over about 4 weeks and with that I managed to get a load of A and O levels and be accepted to University. Didn't go though, hated it.
But that is something else that, hopefully, our children will not need to deal with.
I spend a number of years, mainly in the 70s typing my thoughts and ideas onto paper, because my hand writing is also illegable. I started using a small dictionary made by a company called Letts. It's about 4" x 3" and about an inch thick. Got pretty good at looking up words with one hand. Though it only worked when I knew the spelling was or might be wrong.
Now, I live for my spell checker.