10-Year-Old Stuns Teacher With A Poem About Dyslexia That Can Be Read Forwards And Backwards
There’s a bright kid who could one day star in the sequel of The Dead Poets Society. Or write its screenplay. Jane Broadis, a year 6 teacher at Christ Church Chorleywood C of E School in Watford, United Kingdom, have just tweeted a brilliant poem.
Image credits: Jb5Jane
Image credits: Jb5Jane
“Sadly so often in schools children with dyslexia never hear that they are often able to think in ways others cannot,” Broadis added. Dyslexia is a disorder, characterized by trouble with reading despite normal intelligence. Different people are affected by it in different ways, including difficulties in spelling words, reading quickly, writing words, “sounding out” words in the head, and so on.
Despite a popular misconception, dyslexia isn’t limited to people with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). It is believed to be caused by both genetic and environmental factors.
Many of the commenters have also mistakenly called the poem a palindrome. However, a palindrome is a phrase, number or other sequences of characters which reads the same backward as forward. For example, “madam,” “racecar.” A palindrome can even be a sentence-long phrase that needs to have its capital letters and punctuation adjusted in order to be read the same from both ways (“A man, a plan, a canal, Panama!”).
People were incredibly moved by the clever poem
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I was Always behind in school, told several times " give up, your just stupid." Spelling, writing and reading were impossible for me. I failed in grade school, middle school and finally dropped out of high school. Very discouraging! However, I always wanted to go to go back to school. When I was 35 I went to a Community College. I was successful at math and science. I continued my education. I graduated and went on to Medical School. Don't believe what others tell you. Follow your heart and you might be as surprised as I was to find passion and success. Plus god bless spell check. Auto correct is evil lol.
Autocorrect is evil even for "normal" people.
Load More Replies...All three of my brothers were dyslexic, just like their maternal grandfather. My middle brother struggled the most with it and was a slow reader his entire life. In the third grade, back in the 1950s, his teacher gave the kids an IQ test with 5 essay questions. At the end of an hour, the teacher gathered all the exams. My brother had been able to get through and answer only 2 of the questions. She called him stupid and treated him as such for the rest of the year. That "news" traveled with him to the next few grades and all his teachers were prejudiced against him. When Mrs. Patterson (yes, I'm talking to you!) died, we all sang "Ding Dong the Witch is Dead!" -- with gusto.
I'm impressed by their writing. I'm 33 and a 10 year old has better handwriting than me.
I'm impressed he can write cursive. I thought they weren't teaching that in school anymore.
Load More Replies...This is so deep and thought out. It made me cry, just like the "I am Odd" poem.
It took me a minute but this is really nice. I'm happy for the kid.
Had to have it explained to me. I’ve a mild case of dyslexia. It’s subtle. I never realized what was going on until my 30s when I was being bullied by a boss and the stress (and f*****g psych drugs) made my dyslexia worse (and it has remained worse than it was prior to psych drugs, even off of the damn s**t for 8 years). My bigger problem is dyscalculia, which actually is dyslexia combined with working memory problems.
My boyfriend is dyslexic and he was bullied most of his childhood for being 'stupid' He went on to self teach computer programming (do you know how tough C+++ and JavaScript and all the other stuff is?) and he went on to be self sufficient monetary wise. I wonder if those kids who bullied him back in the day realise how talented dyslexic people really are. This 10 year old's way of thinking and writing proved that.
I an regarded as the smartest guy on the planet. I am dyslexic. I was concidered stupid until I took tests in second grade. I got the highest score on Earth. Third grade too. Fourth, fifth, etc. I was bullied. I’m a monster now. I have dyslexia, which is a cebreal - ventricular dysfunction. My brain is evolved, not dysfunctional. There is no box to think out of. You are the ones that will be left behind. I’ve already had children and grandchildren. You have already been left behind. Yes I’m angry. Bully me? I’m stupid? Rethink everything.
Load More Replies...Read each sentence from left to right as normal - regardless of whether you start at the top or the bottom.
Load More Replies...This made me feel amazing inside. I have ADHD and I entirely understand the criticism when people say I am annoying and I feel useless
Not only did he write a very moving poem -- whichever direction it's read; but he wrote it in a secret code many American schoolchildren won't be able to read: cursive.
Just read Barbara Kingsolver's masterpiece The Poisonwood Bible. Character Adah did this brilliantly.
Her insight, in to how others see her, is incredible. It’s sad, that we still have parents that teach their kids different is wrong, and a person with learning disabilities is stupid. We are all different kids of learners! Some are visual, some audio, other written. We just need to allow these students to learn their best way. I was never good at math, but then again, I never had a teacher, ever, take the time to teach me a better way to understand numbers. But guess what? My language and comprehension is amazing. I did really well with Aristotelian logic, And I loved it. Math, with words! In nursing school, ratio and proportions I made an A. So, we all have strengths and weaknesses. Your student, is incredibly insightful, and has an intensity with her words. I hope she continues to write, and let her star shine brightly. Keep getting up. Eventually, you end up above the c**p, and everyone will see your light!
This is so amazing and I can feel what she feels I like how I read it backwards it really touched my heart.Blessings for this young soul and great life.Bless you!
I am not dyslexic, but this poem is amazing! And why would a teacher ever call their student stupid?!
Chorleywood isn't actually in Watford, but aside from that this article is perfick <3
I love how the complete theme of the poem changes when you read it backwards! <3
Took a while for me to figure it out but this is amazing and beautiful! And to come from a 10 year old is beyond amazing and am very impressed.
My oldest daughter and I both have dysgraphia, making school very difficult for both of us. For her she loses her thought before she can hand write it out, but fortunately she can type faster than she can write, so she's been able to get that accommodation at school for most of her school work. For myself, I have an extraordinarily difficult time putting my thoughts into words, so being given more time to compose my responses is so helpful. This affects me socially as well, on top of my autism!
I read it backwards at first too, haha. I get that it is from bottom to top as well as top to bottom. This person did beautiful work with it and glad it is getting the shares and attention it deserves.
Am I the only one getting tired of these impaired "kids" posting about their "bad" condition just for some attention. They would be better off putting effort into enhancing their life than desperately seeking approval online. Pathetic.
I was Always behind in school, told several times " give up, your just stupid." Spelling, writing and reading were impossible for me. I failed in grade school, middle school and finally dropped out of high school. Very discouraging! However, I always wanted to go to go back to school. When I was 35 I went to a Community College. I was successful at math and science. I continued my education. I graduated and went on to Medical School. Don't believe what others tell you. Follow your heart and you might be as surprised as I was to find passion and success. Plus god bless spell check. Auto correct is evil lol.
Autocorrect is evil even for "normal" people.
Load More Replies...All three of my brothers were dyslexic, just like their maternal grandfather. My middle brother struggled the most with it and was a slow reader his entire life. In the third grade, back in the 1950s, his teacher gave the kids an IQ test with 5 essay questions. At the end of an hour, the teacher gathered all the exams. My brother had been able to get through and answer only 2 of the questions. She called him stupid and treated him as such for the rest of the year. That "news" traveled with him to the next few grades and all his teachers were prejudiced against him. When Mrs. Patterson (yes, I'm talking to you!) died, we all sang "Ding Dong the Witch is Dead!" -- with gusto.
I'm impressed by their writing. I'm 33 and a 10 year old has better handwriting than me.
I'm impressed he can write cursive. I thought they weren't teaching that in school anymore.
Load More Replies...This is so deep and thought out. It made me cry, just like the "I am Odd" poem.
It took me a minute but this is really nice. I'm happy for the kid.
Had to have it explained to me. I’ve a mild case of dyslexia. It’s subtle. I never realized what was going on until my 30s when I was being bullied by a boss and the stress (and f*****g psych drugs) made my dyslexia worse (and it has remained worse than it was prior to psych drugs, even off of the damn s**t for 8 years). My bigger problem is dyscalculia, which actually is dyslexia combined with working memory problems.
My boyfriend is dyslexic and he was bullied most of his childhood for being 'stupid' He went on to self teach computer programming (do you know how tough C+++ and JavaScript and all the other stuff is?) and he went on to be self sufficient monetary wise. I wonder if those kids who bullied him back in the day realise how talented dyslexic people really are. This 10 year old's way of thinking and writing proved that.
I an regarded as the smartest guy on the planet. I am dyslexic. I was concidered stupid until I took tests in second grade. I got the highest score on Earth. Third grade too. Fourth, fifth, etc. I was bullied. I’m a monster now. I have dyslexia, which is a cebreal - ventricular dysfunction. My brain is evolved, not dysfunctional. There is no box to think out of. You are the ones that will be left behind. I’ve already had children and grandchildren. You have already been left behind. Yes I’m angry. Bully me? I’m stupid? Rethink everything.
Load More Replies...Read each sentence from left to right as normal - regardless of whether you start at the top or the bottom.
Load More Replies...This made me feel amazing inside. I have ADHD and I entirely understand the criticism when people say I am annoying and I feel useless
Not only did he write a very moving poem -- whichever direction it's read; but he wrote it in a secret code many American schoolchildren won't be able to read: cursive.
Just read Barbara Kingsolver's masterpiece The Poisonwood Bible. Character Adah did this brilliantly.
Her insight, in to how others see her, is incredible. It’s sad, that we still have parents that teach their kids different is wrong, and a person with learning disabilities is stupid. We are all different kids of learners! Some are visual, some audio, other written. We just need to allow these students to learn their best way. I was never good at math, but then again, I never had a teacher, ever, take the time to teach me a better way to understand numbers. But guess what? My language and comprehension is amazing. I did really well with Aristotelian logic, And I loved it. Math, with words! In nursing school, ratio and proportions I made an A. So, we all have strengths and weaknesses. Your student, is incredibly insightful, and has an intensity with her words. I hope she continues to write, and let her star shine brightly. Keep getting up. Eventually, you end up above the c**p, and everyone will see your light!
This is so amazing and I can feel what she feels I like how I read it backwards it really touched my heart.Blessings for this young soul and great life.Bless you!
I am not dyslexic, but this poem is amazing! And why would a teacher ever call their student stupid?!
Chorleywood isn't actually in Watford, but aside from that this article is perfick <3
I love how the complete theme of the poem changes when you read it backwards! <3
Took a while for me to figure it out but this is amazing and beautiful! And to come from a 10 year old is beyond amazing and am very impressed.
My oldest daughter and I both have dysgraphia, making school very difficult for both of us. For her she loses her thought before she can hand write it out, but fortunately she can type faster than she can write, so she's been able to get that accommodation at school for most of her school work. For myself, I have an extraordinarily difficult time putting my thoughts into words, so being given more time to compose my responses is so helpful. This affects me socially as well, on top of my autism!
I read it backwards at first too, haha. I get that it is from bottom to top as well as top to bottom. This person did beautiful work with it and glad it is getting the shares and attention it deserves.
Am I the only one getting tired of these impaired "kids" posting about their "bad" condition just for some attention. They would be better off putting effort into enhancing their life than desperately seeking approval online. Pathetic.
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