Marine Biological Labratory
Lecture Series
08/12/05
The Science of Reading: Overcoming Dyslexia
Sally E. Shaywitz, Yale University School of Medicine
and Bennett A. Shaywitz, Yale University School of Medicine
Introduction by William
T. Speck, Marine Biological Laboratory
Lecture Abstract:
Extraordinary progress in understanding the nature of reading and
dyslexia, including their neural underpinnings, have direct implications
for the earlier and more accurate identification and more effective
treatment of dyslexia. This presentation focuses on these discoveries
and their translation into clinical practices for overcoming dyslexia.
Sally E. Shaywitz is Professor of Pediatrics at the Yale
University School of Medicine. Dr. Shaywitz received her AB (with
Honors) from the City University where she was elected to Phi Beta
Kappa, and her M.D. from Albert Einstein College of Medicine. She
is currently with her husband, Dr. Bennett A. Shaywitz, Co-Director
of the Yale Center for the Study of Learning and Attention.
Dr. Sally Shaywitz' research provides the basic framework: conceptual
model, epidemiology and neurobiology for the scientific study of
learning disabilities, particularly dyslexia. Dr. Shaywitz is the
author of 200 scientific articles, chapters and books, including
the widely acclaimed national bestseller, Overcoming Dyslexia:
A New and Complete Science-Based Program for Reading Problems at
any Level (Knopf, 2003) which received the 2004 Margo
Marek Book Award and the 2004 NAMI Book Award.
Dr. Shaywitz, a member of the Institute
of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences, will be awarded
an Honorary Degree by Williams College in June 2005. Among her other
accomplishments, she was selected, along with her husband as recipient
of the 2004 Lawrence G. Crowley Distinguished Lectureship at Stanford
University, the 2001 Leonard Apt Lectureship of the American Academy
of Pediatrics and the 1999 Sidney Berman Award of the American Academy
of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry. She received the 2004 Townsend
Harris Medal of the City College of New York and was also the 1998
recipient of the Achievement Award in Women's Health of the Society
for the Advancement of Women's Health Research and the 1995 Distinguished
Alumnus Award of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine. Each year,
Dr. Shaywitz has been chosen as "One of the Best Doctors in
America" and "One of America's Top Doctors" and one
of "New York's Top Doctors." Dr. Shaywitz currently serves
on the Advisory Council of the National Institute of Neurological
Diseases and Stroke (NINDS), the National Research Council Committee
on Women in Science and Engineering, the National Board for Education
Sciences, the scientific advisory board of the March of Dimes and
the Scientific Advisory Board of the Haan Foundation for Children.
Dr. Shaywitz co-chairs the National Research Council Committee
on Gender Differences in the Careers of Science, Engineering and
Mathematics Faculty; she has most recently served on the Institute
of Medicine Committee on Understanding the Biology of Sex and Gender
Difference; on the National Reading Panel and on the Committee to
Prevent Reading Difficulties in Young Children of the National Research
Council. Dr. Shaywitz also serves on the editorial board
of the Journal of Learning Disabilities and Learning Disabilities:
A Contemporary Journal.
Bennett A. Shaywitz
is Professor of Pediatrics and Neurology and Chief of Pediatric
Neurology at the Yale University School of Medicine. Dr.
Shaywitz received his A.B. from Washington University where he was
elected to Phi Beta Kappa, and his M.D. from Washington University
School of Medicine and completed his Pediatric training and then
a Postdoctoral fellowship in Child Neurology at the Albert Einstein
College of Medicine. Together with his wife, Dr. Sally Shaywitz,
Dr. Bennett Shaywitz established and is currently Co-Director of
the Yale Center for the Study of Learning and Attention. Dr. Shaywitz
has a long-standing interest in disorders of learning and attention
in children and young adults. Recently he has used functional magnetic
resonance imaging (fMRI) to discover differences in brain organization
and function in children and adults with dyslexia and he is now
using fMRI to study how the brain changes as children with dyslexia
are taught to read.
The author of over three hundred scientific papers, Dr. Shaywitz'
honors include, among others, election to membership in the Institute
of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences, selected to deliver
the 2005 New York University Medical Scientist Training Program
Honors Lecture and as recipient of the 2003 Distinguished Alumni
Award from Washington University. Dr. Shaywitz was also selected,
along with his wife, as a recipient of the 2004 Lawrence G. Crowley
Distinguished Lectureship at Stanford University, the 2004 Waldo
E. Nelson lectureship at St. Christopher's Children Hospital and
the 2001 Leonard Apt Lectureship of the American Academy of Pediatrics
and to receive the Sidney Berman Award for the Study and Treatment
of Learning Disabilities presented by the American Academy of Child
and Adolescent Psychiatry. Each year Dr. Shaywitz has been
chosen as "One of the Best Doctors in America" and "One
of America's Top Doctors." He currently serves on the
Scientific Advisory Board of the March of Dimes, on the Functional
Brain Imaging Advisory Board of the Haan Foundation for Children
and has served on the Institute of Medicine Immunization Safety
Review Committee. Dr. Shaywitz also serves on the editorial board
of Pediatrics in Review, Learning Disabilities: A Contemporary
Journal, and Child Neuropsychology.
William T. Speck
received his B.A. from Rutgers University and his M.D. from the
Wake Forest University School of Medicine. After completing his
residency and fellowship training at Columbia University, he obtained
a joint appointment in the Departments of Pediatrics and Microbiology.
After three years, Dr. Speck moved to the Department of Pediatrics
at Case Western Reserve University, where he directed the Division
of Infectious Diseases and house staff education and subsequently
served as Professor and later Chairman and Director of the Department
of Pediatrics. In addition, in 1982 he was appointed Chief Executive
Officer of Rainbow Babies and Children’s Hospital, an appointment
he held for ten years. In 1992 Dr. Speck moved to New York to become
the President and CEO of the Presbyterian Hospital, a position he
held until 1999, when the hospital merged with New York Hospital
and its regional health care system, creating the largest academic
health care delivery system in the United States. In August 2000,
he joined the MBL as Interim Director and Chief Executive Officer.
In 2001, Dr. Speck was appointed Director and Chief Executive Officer
of the MBL. A pediatrician by training, Dr. Speck first came to
the MBL in the 1970s to conduct research on the effects of drugs
and environmental pollutants on developing embryos. He is a member
of the MBL Corporation and has served on the Laboratory’s
Board of Trustees since 1994.