Hi, I’m Samantha from Learning Success. We produce videos to help parents embrace their child’s brilliance and unleash their full potential.

There may be just as many girls who struggle with dyslexia, dyscalculia, or dysgraphia as there are boys. Yes, that statement flies in the face of conventional wisdom. The common belief that is presented by the experts is that more boys are dyslexic than girls. But we’re pretty sure that long-held common belief is just wrong. And we’ve got some pretty good evidence to back that up. Not only that, it’s this common belief that is a big part of the problem. Because many think that dyslexia is uncommon in girls, it often doesn’t get looked for in girls. It gets missed. And then these girls suffer. 

We think this is a big problem that is just being ignored. Often, instead of getting the help they need, dyslexic girls just get put down. Told to try harder. Marked as lazy or stupid. We know this is common because we get so many emails from women who didn’t get help and later in life realized how much it hurt them. And we also have data that shows it.In this video, I am going to reveal that data.

 

Even dyslexic celebrities tell the same tale.

Barbara Corcoran, of Shark Tank, says “I was labeled as the ‘dumb kid’ that couldn’t read or write”

And she has said that that feeling sticks with her even today, despite all of her success.

Jennifer Aniston was quoted as saying “I thought I wasn’t smart, I just couldn’t retain anything”

And Cher said “I couldn’t read quickly enough to get all my homework done, and for me, math was like trying to understand Sanskrit”

Even Professor Elizabeth Blackburn, who won the Nobel Prize in Medicine said.  “I had a lot of trouble in school and was put into remedial classes. I thought that I was stupid” 

These women made it in life, but even so, the emotions stuck with them. Maybe those feelings of inadequacy pushed them to their success. Personal demons can do that.  But it doesn’t have to be that way. Success comes to the confident too.