Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:My kid with dyslexia and dysgraphia is a first year college student, and he’s been surprised by having to go back to handwriting. He has classes where every assignment, every test, must be handwritten. I don’t know if accommodations would get him out of that - he has refused to go to the disability office. I say this just to encourage everyone to keep on with the handwriting and overall skill of writing by hand. They may need it in high school and college.
I think this has to do with trying to stop cheating.
In any event, having poor handwriting is different from a language based disorder.
Poor handwriting can be a component of a disability -- it could be a fine motor problem, or it could be one result of a a language processing disorder that makes it difficulty to accurately correlate sound/symbol connections, or it could be a contributor to broader problems with the production of writing in terms of idea organization or attending to conventions of writing (because a student finds it so difficult to write legibly that it takes so much cognitive energy just to physically write that there is not much cognitive space leftover for the generation and organization of ideas.
Handwriting or keyboarding is not an either/or proposition. Our IEP team kept trying to push a keyboarding accommodation in lieu of special instruction in handwriting, which they did not want to have to do. I kept insisting on both, saying that my kid needed the accommodation but that I also wanted him to be able to write a grocery list or a postal address or a put a note in a bottle if he was ever stranded on a desert island.