Keeping Going
I decided to go with another personal blog this week, following on from reposting the dyslexia assessment one. It’s been an odd week. On many levels it has been an uplifting and amazing week as I am fortunate enough to have close friendships with inspirational people, one of which is Alex Ntung, whose TED talk I watched. He is one of the educators with the charity Education 4 Diversity (E4D) who do wonderful work. Their website: https://education4diversity.co.uk/ is well worth a look. The TED talk is at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bz1albPWxRE and, knowing Alex as I do, is extremely inspirational.
I mention the above because that’s what helps keep things in perspective and the resilience strong when facing difficulties caused by my own dyslexia. My issues are nothing when I see what people with real difficulties face daily and overcome. The week ending as it did with the atrocities in New Zealand also place my own worries of the week in clear perspective. They are nothing. The bigger picture of standing up against hatred, speaking out against injustice is much more important.
However, my own difficulties this week, although minor against the bigger picture, are ones I will share as many people are affected by this on a daily basis and they do need to be addressed.
As some of you will know, I am currently working on my rewrite of thesis following my viva last summer. The viva, as it happens, went ok. I could explain much of what they needed to know and asked about. It was a long, gruelling affair; however, I could get my points across. The problem, it transpires is that much of what I spoke about in my viva hadn’t actually reached the page. This is one of the issues with dyslexia, the thoughts in my head merge with the words on the page so that I think I have written things that are still in reality only in my own head, something that others can neither see nor read! So I’m busy adding and changing things throughout the thesis. The research itself is good. Daniel Muijs, head of research at Ofsted, certainly found it so when we met to discuss my findings. Bits that I’ve rewritten to date I can see have greatly improved and developed what was previously written. This has been accomplished through carefully chunking the changes I’ve needed to address, focussing on very specific bits.
This week I decided to read the whole thing before reworking the analysis chapters. That’s where it all fell down. In reading the whole thesis, I also read the reports from the examiners – pre and post viva. These talked of details that I found overwhelming. These were things like the referencing, the appendices, inconsistencies in presentation, some inconsistencies of ordering and other aspects that run through the whole thesis. All of my insecurities came flooding back to me as I sat sobbing at my computer. I had this all engulfing feeling of being stupid and inadequate, of never getting through this and never achieving the actual doctorate.
Now on one level, this is all irrelevant. What I wanted to achieve when starting out on my research about teachers’ emotional response to inspection was to make a difference and have the voices of the teachers interviewed heard by those in positions of authority in Ofsted. As I said before, I met with Daniel Muijs in October and spent an hour talking through the various issues raised in my thesis, with him making copious notes. What it leads to, who knows, but the voices have been heard. However, my own sense of academic inadequacy still needs the bit of paper – rather like the scarecrow in The Wizard of Oz. I took a step back and decided to read my dyslexia assessment report. That was a smart move. It reinforced the positives, that I am intelligent, do have good ideas and have many coping strategies. It reminded me that the issues facing me were about my processing, my speed of reading (reading my own thesis had taken a ridiculous amount of time), my working memory and my difficulties with ordering my own ideas, getting these down on paper. Fundamentally, my research and my thesis were good. It was presenting all of it on paper, with academic rigour and procedures that needed more time and patience on my part.
Sensibly, having done this, I emailed my supervisor – she’s amazing. She told me to go through the reports annotating them. Tick off what I’d already achieved, make notes about what was still to be done and chunk, chunk, chunk. This was all advice I could easily have offered to someone else, but is so much harder to do it for myself. What I have also found overwhelming, in a good way, is how it feels to have someone championing and supporting you though this. I’m used to being that someone for other people; it’s what I’ve done throughout my 34 years as a teacher and educator. Being on the receiving end, for the first time in my adult life, is strange and makes me both emotional and thankful. It’s strange, as I’m currently lecturing on an SEN module, supporting students, mainly TAs, who are facing adult education, many of them for the first time in a while. Several of them have talked of their own diagnosed or suspected dyslexia issues. They’ve said that my openness about my own dyslexia has helped them to manage and admit to theirs. Supporting others is so much easier than fully recognising my own strengths, but it is helping me to see my own abilities and recognise achievements, refocusing me for my own continued work on my thesis.
I will get there, I’m determined. Recognising and being aware of why something is difficult and challenging is an important part of addressing the issues and moving forwards. Dyslexia, as with many other areas of SEND, requires us to recognise the specific areas that affect us and work out how to remove the barriers these cause. Chunking, something which sounds so simple, is actually a really big help in managing tasks. The other thing is sometimes to walk away, take a bit of time out and come back afresh, having taking time to do something affirming to enable that resilience to shine through.
After all, the problems I face are nothing compared to what so many people endure on a daily basis. The bigger picture is what really matters here.


