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Technology to Help with Learning Disabilities?

GotSanity asks: "I have a little brother who is now 18 and still can not read or do basic math. At an early age he was diagnosed with a level 10 mental handicap. I am curious as to what technology is available to help teach him to read. The major problems with most educational software I have found is that they both cater to younger minds (even though he has a learning disability he still is involved with everyday teenager activities like video games and music) and are often far to expensive for a working class family. I originally got him a copy of Typing of the Dead, and through it he has been learning to read and spell better. What novel education ideas can the Slashdot community suggest?"

3 of 330 comments (clear)

  1. DSM Diagnosis? by EricTheGreen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What is the nature of your brother's disability? PDD? DS? Kanner's autism? Dyslexia? CHI? What defines "effective" software is going to vary considerably based on the diagnosis...

  2. A advice by tomjen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Since most of the replies are crap i am going to post an advice that has helped me learn to read very well:
    Read as many books as posible - start with the really easy and move on. In the beginning your brother will properly need someone to read the words to him - he will then reconise them later. A good tool might be festival

    As for natual selection post above:
    Our society is rich - it can afford (and should) aford to help everybody, how wish to be helped

    --
    Freedom or George Bush
  3. Re:Video-game related material by Zutfen · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So he's an otherwise healthy 18 year old? And kiddie games are out of the question eh?

    What do healthy 18 year olds like?
    Pr0n of course!!
    So make a webpage with math problems, and if he gets it right, he gets a pr0n pic. This would take all of 15 minutes to write the html for (okay maybe 45minutes if you get distracted by the Pr0n), and would be a simple incentive system.

    Okay, okay, so it doesn't have to be nudie pics, but seriously, some sort of quickly made webpage with multiple problems that have an appealing reward might be useful (mp3 plays, or if he gets a high enough score you'll take him to dinner or something... if it's a fun outcome, it should be a positive experience for him, and he just might learn something too.

    If you take my advice on the MP3, just promise not to tell the RIAA it was my idea! *adjusts his foil hat*

    --
    I'm too lazy to enter a sig. Hey wait a second! You tricked me!