Understood has resources for people with all kinds of learning differences. This website is super user-friendly and has a mountain of information. Try this Dyslexia and Anxiety Article first.
You'll find ready-to-use teaching strategies, in-classroom videos, interviews with teachers and reading experts, and quick, concrete answers to common questions about teaching reading and writing.
Start with the Ten Maxims.
Infographics and Infosheets for parents and educators are provided by the Tennessee Center for the Study and Treatment of Dyslexia.
Changing this from the "Dyslexia" page. This one is much more current and useful.
The tried and true! Reading Rockets has been around forever and there is so much great information that is easy to digest here. Here's a whole section on Helping Struggling Readers.
A collection of dyslexia resources was compiled and curated by the University of Florida Literacy Institute team.
The goal is to improve the outcomes of preK-12 students by making scientific evidence and reliable, proven practices more readily available to and used by parents and families.
This PDF includes most of the resources mentioned below, but also a slew of other things.
Hoopla can be accessed with your Eugene Public Library card and has a great selection of audiobooks for all ages!
Also accessible with your Eugene Public Library card! Overdrive or Libby are also Apps that can send the audiobooks right to your phone!
This is a subscription service that provides access to human-read audiobooks with lots of books that are often used for class projects.
The answer is yes. I give all of my money to the evil overlord that is Amazon.
To join, you must have a reading barrier that qualifies for Bookshare. Most schools have access to this for students with disabilities.