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neurodiversity is a way of understanding that human brains are all wired differently, we are all neurodiverse and have neurodiversity. This is just a natural and valuable part of being human.
However, someone who is neurodivergent will have what is often known as a spikey profile (e.g. real strengths in some areas, and perhaps challenges in others). The term is used to encompass all the conditions that you’ve probably heard of, dyslexia, ADHD, autism and dyspraxia.
For such a long time these individuals have been thought of through a deficit lens or at a disadvantage, and put into a box that stereotypes to their label. However, what is becoming more and more clear is that we should recognise the neurodiversity framework for both the challenges people may face and the unique strengths they bring, and recognise where these conditions over lap leading to each individuals needs.
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A team of experts from the School of Psychology at Queen’s University Belfast, led by Dr Kinga Morsanyi, carried out research on the prevalence of specific learning disorder in mathematics (SLDM), which is also known as dyscalculia.
The researchers studied the mathematics performance of 2,421 primary school children over a number of school years. Although the researchers expect that the number of pupils with dyscalculia is similar to those with dyslexia, of the 2,421 children studied, 108 children had received an official diagnosis of dyslexia, but just one child had officially been diagnosed with dyscalculia prior to the study. Based on the results of the study, the researchers actually identified 112 children who are likely to have the condition.
Dr Morsanyi explains: “In society, there is sadly a widespread notion that you need a special talent to be good at maths, and that struggling with maths is normal for some people, but this is not the case and it’s not something we would accept if a pupil was unable to read.
“Our study shows that in almost all cases, children who appear to have dyscalculia are not being diagnosed. Within the sample of children with dyscalculia, 80 per cent of the children have other developmental conditions, such as dyslexia or speech and language difficulties, and as the current practice is to assign one diagnostic label to each child, this could partially explain why mathematics difficulties are so often ignored.”
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Evidence shows that early identification, mathematics-specific interventions, and improved teacher training can help people with dyscalculia.
However, researchers have highlighted that dyscalculia remains underdiagnosed and under-recognised in the UK, with limited training available for teachers and low research funding compared with other conditions like dyslexia. Strengthening early identification and improving professional training could improve life outcomes for people with dyscalculia (PDF) and contribute to national economic productivity.
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The prevalence of dyscalculia among schoolchildren ranges between 3% and 6%, with a similar distribution among girls and boys, and the most effective treatment is early detection. To help children and young people with this disorder with their learning, Neurekalab, in which the University of Vic – Central University of Catalonia (UVic-UCC) and the University of Barcelona (UB) are shareholders, has launched the NeurekaNUM application, which is aimed at professionals and families who want to help their sons and daughters with their mathematics for a specific period of time.
The NeurekaNUM application “has arisen from the need to create a tool for children with dyscalculia that enables them to do activities to improve their learning process, to try and offset a problem they have to live with”, explains Sergi Grau, dean researcher at the UVic Faculty of Science and Technology, and co-founder of Neurekalab with Josep Maria Serra-Grabulosa, a researcher in the Department of Clinical Psychology and Psychobiology at the UB. “Learning difficulties are closely related to academic failure, low self-esteem and lower levels of employability,” adds Josep M. Serra. One of the researchers’ aims for this tool is “for it not to remain simply a pilot test in a research project, but to scale up its impact through a company with social goals, like Neurekalab.”
See the app HERE
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