Is this my square hole?

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square peg
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Is this my square hole?

Post by square peg »

Hi everyone. Nice place. Here's why I'm here.

I'm studying A-Levels at the moment and my English teacher recently asked if I have dyslexia 'or anything we can say for extra time in the exam', because it's come to her attention how slow I am at practice exams/timed essays. I told her I very much doubted it from the descriptions I'd heard. Still, lately I've been thinking about that problem. It's not that I have any trouble reading. I've usually had a reading age of more than several years above my real age and my spelling and handwriting aren't bad. I'm just slow. At everything. I'm always being nagged to hurry up with something, whether getting dressed, tidying up, or collecting my belongings. I am a day-dreamer, and have often put it down to that, but it seems however hard I concentrate, I'm several minutes behind everyone else, or getting things wrong in haste. For the same reason I very rarely finish exams or tests, however easy. I'm even the last person to understand a joke, though I don't know if that's related. This, my ineptitude at class practicals/following instructions and my difficulty maintaining focus in classes, contributed to my failure to achieve science grades that my sixth form would accept for the next year, and the subsequent defection to my current place of study. This time, I'm taking less challenging subjects with less homework and pressure and am much happier overall, so have done better, but the ever looming threat of time ineffectiveness lingers on. I've gained back enough confidence this year to apply for another science course, but I know attentiveness to the degree needed for it may still be a problem and practicals will not be any easier the second time round.

By chance I discovered some information about dyspraxia and found that I have these problems and other traits in common with people diagnosed 'dyspraxic'. On further research I found that I also resonate with 'dyscalculia' and they seem very similar, so I'm going to ask for a formal assessment for learning disabilities. I don't know how many you can be tested for in one sitting. I've already tried phoning the relevant people but got an answering machine. If a diagnosis might get me more support or at least understanding (or stop people bugging me to dance :P), it's worth it. If I'm not diagnosed with it, I hope you all won't mind if I stay, as I do in effect seem to have much in common with you anyway.

Thanks for reading,
SP
Liz944
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Post by Liz944 »

Hi SP

Welcome to the forum....
Drama is life with the dull bits cut out...
Lithium_joe
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Post by Lithium_joe »

Hiya SP,

I am sitting A-levels too at the moment, I was assessed last week for dyspraxia and my slow writing speed was noted, it's not messy just slow - extra time was recommenced for me in examinations.

I took the report to my college who gave me 1/4 extra per hour which today, in a 90 minute exam gave me an extra 25 minutes.

It *really* helped me - I was amazed, how much it eased the pressure and gave me space to think.

No, really go for it, ask for the extra time if you can. I would. :)
Meg
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Post by Meg »

Hey I'm Meg

I always had extra time and I found it really useful.

Anyway I'm coming to the end of a Diploma in Childcare and Education course and am now starting to look for jobs.

Welcome to the forum.

Meg
square peg
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Post by square peg »

Thanks for welcoming me Liz, Joe and Meg :)

Joe, cool, that is encouraging. Last week eh? Must have been just in time. Hopefully I can get one before the rest of my exams are over. Do you know if the assessment is free when you're 18? I was considering not telling my parents but I'll have to if there's a fee.
Daniel
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Post by Daniel »

Welcome to the forum, SP. Getting assessed during full time education seems to be the easiest time to get it done, so I wish you luck and let us know how you get on.

I hope you enjoy the forum, and please feel free to post to any existing threads that take your interest.

Dan,
Forum Admin.
Lithium_joe
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Post by Lithium_joe »

I think I'm unusual ('No! Go on, really?' the huddled masses cry)
in that my assessment was relatively easy to arrange, free and painless.

Essentially it panned out like this: I've been accepted to a university degree course this September. I told them (explicitly) I had dyspraxia and that generated interest from student support services who wanted to get an up-to-date assessment.

A great Occupational Therapist took up my cause, and it was all organised by her in the space of a month. I was assessed last week by her and the report written about 5 days later states I am dyspraxic after all and recommends amongst other things extra time in exams as part of my support.

Now this report is intended for my course starting in September but what's good for the goose is good for the gander - so I took the report from the university, showed it to my college where I'm taking the A-level, asked for extra time there and was granted it.

Now, I know not everyone has a smooth a ride as that.

It was *just* in time, and I can recommend it as a route to an assessment but I think it's a fairly atypical route and not one that everyone can have ready access to, nor possibly a university that recognises dyspraxia and (unlike dyslexia) is willing to assess for it.

I don't think assessment are free or even that widely available but do investigate this for yourself, don't rely on hearsay.
I think I was possibly unusually lucky in this regard.

Personally I'd not hesitate to involve my family. I think we all need support from those around us, and obviously I've no idea what home is like for you, but my parents were instrumental in providing me with background on my development that was crucial, I believe, to getting the diagnosis because they could tell me things about my childhood when my co-ordination was at it's poorest.

LJ.
Liz944
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Post by Liz944 »

Don't worry if you have problems with praticals if you enjoy the subject, ignore what people say and think....

If it makes you feel any better I failed my bio and chem A-levels and only got an "E" for both when I re-sat them.... I enjoyed biology and did it at degree level and got a 2:2. So don't give up....

During the process as a sixth former scared the **** out of a class of first years when exploding the chemistry lab when experiment went wrong... Broke so many peices of lab equipment during praticals that I was told I would have to pay for anything broken and eventaly band from the labs....

The chances are also when you do labs at uni they don't have the equipment to go around so you normally work in pairs or groups.... so you can always get someone else to do the risky parts... and save the breakages and embarassment...

The thing with course work and deadlines is to set small targets and start early, thus giving yourself an easier ride and not having the last minute rush and panic...
Drama is life with the dull bits cut out...
square peg
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Post by square peg »

Thanks Dan :)

LJ, I wouldn't mind my parents knowing if I'm diagnosed with anything, but until then I think my mum would try to discourage it. Until my A-Levels I've always been above average academically (except for maths) so it will probably seem strange that I want to be labelled as learning disabled. I do think looking back that the problems I had last year have always held me back to some extent, and have earned me negative attention, but only in a highly pressured, high achieving further education environment was I unable to keep up with official standards. Until then it was all just inconvenience and no one cared enough that I didn't finish anything to help. That's what I'll have to explain. You're right about them being good references though. They could back me up on a lot of information.

Liz, the course I want to take requires science as well. I am more hopeful about next year, and I do like biology. :)
square peg
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Post by square peg »

Wow, I take it all back! When I finished that post, I started looking up more symptoms of dyscalculia and my mum asked about it. I told her what my English teacher said and she said 'maybe you should ask for extra time then'. :Eek: When I said she might have to give me information about by childhood she started reeling off early milestones there and then! I thought she'd be against it because she didn't like me suggesting that my sister get tested for dyslexia, I suppose because she doubted the benefits of a diagnosis. Today my personal tutor handed a reference to the people who'll give me an assessment. Just a matter of waiting now. :D
donnaf
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Post by donnaf »

Welcome square peg n well done on the assessment thing :)
I get knocked down, but I get up again, you're never ever gonna keep me down :D

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Lithium_joe
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Post by Lithium_joe »

Wow, I take it all back! When I finished that post, I started looking up more symptoms of dyscalculia and my mum asked about it. I told her what my English teacher said and she said 'maybe you should ask for extra time then'. Eek When I said she might have to give me information about by childhood she started reeling off early milestones there and then! I thought she'd be against it because she didn't like me suggesting that my sister get tested for dyslexia, I suppose because she doubted the benefits of a diagnosis. Today my personal tutor handed a reference to the people who'll give me an assessment. Just a matter of waiting now. Big Grin
Impresive stuff SP! \:D/

Yeah mums are good like that ;)

I think Dan's right about Full-time Education being the best time to get assessed because the support systems seem to already be in place.

Good luck getting that all arranged! :D

P.S
I'd add that I've had co-ordination problems all my life, and have been educationally average with moments of brilliance - except that in all that time dyspraxia as a named termed wasn't really known when I was at school, outside of perhaps some medical and neuroscience journals.

Dyspraxia was only first mention in regards to my performance when I was 13. When I was 18 and at university I was assessed and told I was fine (but they were looking for dyslexia, I'm certain) I had a lot of problems doing my masters degree because I *didn't* tell them I had dyspraxia (since the last report I had said so) and only is it now, as I head back to university for the third time, that I've finally got my condition named and in print and the support that comes with that.

Already I think having this report done has made a difference (I've taken an AS in maths in this intermediate year to improve - hence the extra time in this week's exam) and it holds out the promise of doing so again all next year! :grin:
Lucy_Rush
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Post by Lucy_Rush »

hi and welcome to the forum sp. Lucy
Shadwell
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Post by Shadwell »

Hi Square_peg, sorry about the delay in writing this welcome, just that I have been very busy with pc probs, and family over from Australia.

hope you like it here.

Mike
Carpe Veritas
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Post by Carpe Veritas »

Extra time is very useful but gets very annoying when you have a 3 and 1/2 hour exam and 25% extra time....

I've examed late into the night before #-o
Always be obscure, clearly
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