Exercises 'aid
dyslexic pupils'
Children
with dyslexia could be helped by the introduction of special movements and exercises
into school sports lessons, research suggests. Special routines, designed to tap
into reflexes from birth, lead to better co-ordination which in turn can improve
reading and writing skills, according to psychologist Martin McPhillips.
As part of his research,
Mr McPhillips examined the movements made by a foetus in its mother's womb and
noted that primary reflexes - like the palmar reflex, where a baby will grasp
at an object placed on its hand - assisted the foetus's development. But,
after birth, the psychologist found that the baby gradually began to adopt an
upright position and its "secondary" reflexes took over, letting the toddler walk
about. Mr McPhillips
discovered that many of the dyslexic children he tested had strong primary reflexes,
which hindered their ability to do activities such as holding a pencil or following
words on a page. He
has now devised a series of movements and exercises which are designed to mimic
these reflexes and thereby "switch them off" and promote co-ordination.
Academic impact
The techniques have so far
proved highly successful and Mr McPhillips hopes to see such activity incorporated
within physical education lessons in schools. Martin
McPhillips said the programme was indebted to previous work that has been done
on dyslexia and on movement and exercise. But
he says that so far as he is aware the sequence his team devised is the first
to have shown an academic impact in a formal trial. Nor
is it only children who can benefit, although with adults the impact is likely
to take longer because their neurological system is more "fixed", Mr McPhillips
said. "It's not just a reading and writing problem, it affects all of a person's
organisation and it affects their self-esteem and confidence as well. "So regaining
some of that may be more important than the reading and writing." Mr
McPhillips carried out his research with the Dyslexia Project, a joint venture
between Queen's University and the Royal Maternity Hospital, Belfast. A charitable
foundation, Primary Movement, has
been set up - with a website - to handle queries about the exercise scheme. His
work is reported in the February edition of The Psychologist, journal of the British
Psychological Society. With thanks to the
highly recommended BBC.
Read the full
story.
Primary
Movement Program and Dyslexia
- Maire Bree outlines the basis for this new treatment
which has helped a lot of dyslexic children.
Effects
of replicating primary-reflex movements on specific reading difficulties in children:
a randomised, double-blind, controlled trial
- Lancet Journal article by Martin McPhillips, P G Hepper, G Mulhem.
Training
in Primary Movement
- courses for teachers in Ireland and Birmingham UK.
Primary
Movement Therapy
- center in Australia. |