"I've often thought that publishing books to help dyslexic people is a bit of a paradox - that is until I read Ginny's book. Here at last is information that allows for the diversity of its readership's reading preferences; there's meaningful use of colour, chunked text, clearly isolated tips and insights, etc. Possibly best of all, there's an opportunity to guide one's personal reading interest at will so that interesting bits that appeal individually can be got at without a lot of bother. Awesome! Ginny advises that neurodiverse learners will benefit from "being careful, particularly at the beginning of something new" and this holds true for this book. Take time to orientate yourself in its Preface to learn how the book is set out and then dip in where your fancy takes you. The advice the book offers is based on years of experience and insightful expertise. Ginny is right to thank all her students; working through this book, her readers will thank her back tenfold." -- Tanya Zybutz, Dyslexia Co-ordinator, Royal Central School of Speech & Drama, UK.
"Ginny's zen-like understanding of the workings of the human mind have been laid bare in this book, which helped me to achieve far higher than I ever thought was possible in my studies." -- William Darby, MEng, MSc, former student of Ginny Stacey "Having dyslexia/SpLD means thinking, learning and doing things differently. This is exemplified skilfully by the layout of the book. It both appeals to different reading styles and shows others that these styles exist. An expert, Ginny gives information, examples and explanations that are essential for anyone working to enable and support a dyslexic/SpLD individual. It is a comprehensive and practical guide, with skills and strategies that transfer to several contexts (studying, the workplace and everyday life). " - Henrietta Court MSc; OCR DipSpLD; TPC (Patoss)., Adult Dyslexia/SpLD specialist, UK.
"Great! This is a book for dyslexic/SpLD people about strategies for gaining knowledge (input, storage), and about accessing and demonstrating knowledge (recall, output). The book allows you to navigate the content in your own way and be rewarded with personally relevant information. It encourages you to develop your "tool bag for living confidently". Exploring the useful preface and glossary guides you around the content of this book and links you to others in the series. I have been using techniques Ginny taught me for many years." - Dr Mary Eld, former SpLD student of Ginny Stacey, UK. 'Unusually, this book allows both for a linear (read it straight through) approach and a 'move around the book' and 'dip in' approach, with coloured boxes and other signposting features to help readers (especially dyslexic ones) who want a less conventional approach. The book addresses crucial issues: information processing, reading, listening, writing and doing amongst others.
The font and background colour is not only dyslexia-friendly (hurrah!) but will make the text easier for most people to read. The mind-map-y illustrations, the stories (in orange boxes), the margin notes and space for one's own notes, the use of space in the text, bullet points and headings are all helpful ways through the information and ideas - again, for most people. There are questions to answer, too, which can help with metacognition. And who are these ideas for? This book will suit dyslexic/neurodiverse individuals and those working with them in various ways. As the book itself states, it is hoped that the ideas within it will help those involved in public communication, policy making and the media.' -- Sally Daunt, support tutor at the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts, UK.