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Students struggling with
dyslexia work harder to keep up
By Grace Berry
Junior Amy Kruse
AP enrollment increases
By Mike Stanford
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13 Entertainment 8-9 In-Depth
Volume 54, Issue 8
Friday, April 10, 2015
801 West Kensington Road, Mount Prospect, Illinois 60056
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Executive News Editor
Junior Amy Kruse was in Written and Oral Communication class her freshman year. She excelled in Cambria Myers’ class and Myers told her class that any students with As in the class could talk to her about moving up. Since Kruse had 98 percent in class, she hoped to switch classes. Myers said, ‘Yeah, you’re going to honors,’ and waved her hand like it wasn’t a big deal, but it was a huge accomplishment for Kruse. Kruse was excited to have all her hard work pay off. She was diagnosed with dyslexia when she was in third grade and has had to work twice as
hard as other students to keep up. Dyslexia is a common learning disorder that makes it more difficult for people to read, write and speak. According to Dyslexia Help, one in five people has dyslexia, a disorder that varies in severity. It does not affect intelligence level and has nothing to do with work ethic. (see “Dyslexia”, page 2) When Kruse was diagnosed, it didn’t come as a shock to her family. She didn’t really understand what dyslexia was when she was younger, but her parents were glad that they finally knew how to help their daughter with the difficulties she was having in school. “My parents always told me when I was younger in kinder-
Executive News Editor
Freshman Brendan McGovern did not need much time to realize he needed change. By the end of the first week of his regular-level Written and Oral Communications class, McGovern, now a sophomore, knew he could try more. “I was like, ‘I need to get out of this. This is a joke,’” McGovern said. “We learned what a noun was the first week. It was kind of depressing.” By the time course recommendation day came around, McGovern had established strong grades in his classes, so he decided to move up to Honors World Literature and Composition and Advanced Placement (AP) World History. McGovern was part of a trend. Next year, enrollment in Honors and Advanced Placement (AP) has been increasing and will continue to increase next year. As high-level classes experi-
garten, I would cry at school because I would understand what we were doing,” Kruse said. “But I would be really frustrated because I wouldn’t be able to do the letters or the numbers.” Kruse’s father Alan has dyslexia as well but didn’t know it until much later in his life. He remembers struggling in school, too. “The emotional stress can be very difficult if you can’t spell or you can’t remember numbers,” Alan said. “The basic things that other people do [that you can’t] can kind of be embarrassing.” According to mayoclinic. org, younger children with dyslexia face problems like reading more slowly, difficulty seeing similarities and differences in letters and words and remembering sequences. Special education teacher Rebecca Boorman helps kids with dyslexia in different ways. Many need help editing papers or small accommodations like extra time on assignments. She explained while one as-
ence increased enrollment, teachers need to adapt to teach a large variety of different skill levels in one class. According to counselor Lynn Thornton, the increase stems from a district-wide goal aimed at providing more students the opportunity to take Honors and AP classes. The goal was in response to increasingly competitive college admissions with hopes of providing Prospect’s college-bound students a better shot at their dream schools. Originally, the plan was to encourage students who had taken mostly regularlevel courses in their early years of high school to try more difficult electives, like AP Economics or AP Psychology. However, shortly after instituting the initiative, teachers across the district started recommending more students for higher level classes, core and elective. Even the scores required for
signment may take 5 minutes for an average student, it could take 15-20 for a student with dyslexia. Boorman explained some kids have a class similar to a study hall with her where they can get help and others may just see her after school for help when they need it, but it depends on the student. Since dyslexia has a spectrum in severity, some students need more help than others, but a lot of kids with dyslexia are in mainstream classes. “There’s a lot of people that have dyslexia that you would never know have struggled with it,” Boorman said. When Amy was younger, her parents tried to preserve her drive to do well in school because dyslexia affected her self-esteem. Kruse believes her self-esteem was affected by dyslexia when she was younger. She used to think she was dumb because she couldn’t learn the way other kids could learn. “Now I’m kind of proud of [my dyslexia],” Kruse said.
eighth graders to be placed in high-level classes were decreased. According to Honors World Literature and Composition teacher Karen Kruse, as this continued to happen, an expectation for students to be in Honors and AP classes developed. Not being in high-level classes was stigmatized. While some students were able to thrive in the face of new challenges, others struggled. However, Kruse believes the problem of struggling students did not lie in their intelligence,
“But when I was younger, I didn’t want to tell anyone, and I didn’t think I was smart.” Remediation is a process many children go through when diagnosed with dyslexia. Hours of tutoring and special classes can help patients overcome some reading deficits. Kruse went through a five-year tutoring program with a special instructor using the Susan Barton method. Kruse started the tutoring after she was diagnosed in third grade and stopped in middle school. The program was a lot of work, but it paid off. It improved her reading, grammar and spelling. She also believes she can speak better because the program taught her how sentences were formed. Even with extra help and some accommodations from the school, Kruse has always had to advocate for herself. Dyslexia affects Kruse every day. It takes her longer to do her homework, and she has to work harder at it.
See DYSLEXIA, page 2
but rather their motivation. “There are kids who end up in honors because they like the sound of honors,” Kruse said. “They theoretically want to try honors, but they don’t have [the] work ethic.” McGovern agrees and believes having good time management skills to handle the pace of classes is crucial. Before the initiative was put in place during the late 2000’s, Honors and AP
See ENROLLMENT, page 3
Soccer star Freshman Alex Budnik plays goalie on the US national U14 soccer team. To read more about his experience on the team, turn to ...
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