Are you a big reader, Phil? |
Sometimes yes, sometimes no. |
Sometimes I go a while without reading anything. |
What about you? |
Well, I really love to read. |
I read on the train to work all the time. |
Ah, well, that is a great way to get some reading in, I guess. |
Yes and reading, of course, is a life skill -- an essential skill which is useful or important in everyone’s life. |
But reading can be a struggle for people with dyslexia -- a learning difficulty making it hard for people to read, write or spell. |
It’s thought that around one in ten people in the UK are dyslexic, and many dyslexic children struggle at school, where the focus is on reading and writing. |
But in this episode, we’ll be hearing how dyslexics have other skills which allow them to excel in the workplace. |
As usual, we’ll be learning some useful new words and phrases. |
But first, I have a question for you, Phil. |
Studies have shown that people with dyslexia have enhanced abilities in certain areas and can excel in creative thinking, problem solving and inventiveness. |
So, which famous scientist was dyslexic? |
Was it: a) Stephen Hawking, b) Albert Einstein, or c) Marie Curie? |
Oh, I think... I think it’s b) -- I think it’s Albert Einstein. |
Well, we’ll find out the answer at the end of the programme. |
Now, the British charity Made By Dyslexia shares online learning tools and works with schools and teachers to raise awareness about the condition. |
The charity recently collaborated with British celebrities who have dyslexia for this promotional video: |
If you’re dyslexic, it’s kind of your superpower. |
It’s, like, the way that you think. |
Our brains -- they’re wired to, I think, process information differently. |
The way I see the world might be different from somebody else, but that’s valid. |
In fact, it’s vital. |
You might recognise some of those voices, including actors Orlando Bloom and Keira Knightley and businessman Richard Branson. |
The message is that, far from being a disability, dyslexia is their superpower -- the ability to do something other people can’t. |
Made By Dyslexia was founded by social entrepreneur Kate Griggs, |
and Kate co-authored a report showing that empowering dyslexic workers could boost the global economy by billions. |
BBC World Service programme People Fixing the World met Kate at the report’s London launch event, |
where she explained why being dyslexic can actually give advantages in life, including some exciting job prospects. |
If you think about what you have to do as a spy, you have to be reading people really quickly, spotting complex patterns and solving problems really quickly, |
so you can see whether there’s a terror threat. |
It’s natural that dyslexics are brilliant spies. |
Kate thinks dyslexics make good spies -- people who secretly collect information about another country’s government or organisations. |
Why? |
Because they’re good at reading people. |
To read people means to be able to understand someone’s true intentions through their body language and behaviour, rather than their words. |
Also present at the London charity event was space scientist and dyslexic herself, Dr Maggie Aderin-Pocock. |
Here, Maggie tells BBC World Service’s People Fixing the World how being dyslexic contributes different skills and ideas to her project teams: |
Well, I think it’s recognising people’s skills and differences. |
It’s about teamwork and collaboration. |
We do it in science and that’s when we reach for the stars, but to do that, we need to know our skills and value all the skills. |
Maggie thinks that everyone’s skills should be valued -- or considered important. |
Dyslexics may struggle to read or spell, but their skills in problem-solving and communication, for example, can be essential for scientific success. |
By valuing everyone’s contribution, business and science teams can reach for the stars |
-- an idiom meaning to be ambitious and try to achieve something difficult, even if it seems impossible. |
And talking of reaching for the stars, Pippa, I think it’s time you revealed the answer to your question about successful scientists. |
Yes, I asked you which famous scientist was dyslexic. |
Was it a) Stephen Hawking, b) Albert Einstein, or c) Marie Curie? |
And you were right, Phil. |
It was Albert Einstein. |
OK. Let’s recap the vocabulary we’ve learned, starting with life skill -- an essential skill, such as reading or problem-solving, which is useful in everyone’s life. |
A superpower is the ability to do something that other people can’t. |
A spy is someone who secretly collects information about other countries’ governments or organisations. |
If you’re good at reading people, you can understand people’s real intentions through how they act and behave, instead of what they say. |
If you value something or someone, you consider them to be important. |
And finally, the idiom to reach for the stars means to have high or ambitious aims and try to achieve something difficult, even if it seems impossible. |
Once again, our six minutes are up. |
Hope to see you there soon, but for now, it’s goodbye! |
Goodbye! |

BBC六分钟英语
BBC六分钟英语


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