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Home » 62+ Motivational Dyslexia Awareness Slogans & Quotes

62+ Motivational Dyslexia Awareness Slogans & Quotes

    There are many quotes, taglines, captions and slogans available on World Dyslexia Day awareness online. I have shortlisted a few good awareness slogans and quotes to save your time and energy. Here they are!  

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    Dyslexia is a neurological condition that affects an individual’s ability to read, write, and spell. It is a common learning disability that does not necessarily reflect intelligence but can present challenges in language-based tasks.


    Slogans & Quotes


    Catchy Dyslexia Awareness Slogans, Taglines & Captions | World Dyslexia Day

    1. Unlocking potential, embracing differences
    2. See beyond words
    3. Empower minds, break stigmas
    4. Embracing diversity, building strength
    5. Reading the world differently
    6. Every mind is unique
    7. Embrace neurodiversity
    8. Dyslexia, Turning challenges into triumphs, one word at a time
    9. Dyslexia is a superpower
    10. Empathy, understanding, awareness
    11. Beyond words
    12. I have a word jumble superpower!
    13. I’m not lost; I’m just on an unplanned word adventure
    14. I’m not dyslexic; i’m just alphabetically creative
    15. Dyslexics have fnu with wrdos!
    16. Words may jumble, but my determination stays unshaken
    17. Spelling is hard, but my spirit is unbreakable
    18. Life’s too short for perfect spelling; let’s embrace the beautiful chaos of words
    19. Who said words have to follow the rules? I’m crafting my own dictionary


    Popular Quotes on Dyslexia Awareness

    1. “Dyslexia is a neurological issue, not a character flaw.” — James Redford
    2. “People are embarrassed to admit they’re dyslexic. Jay Blades
    3. “Dyslexia is not due to a lack of intelligence, it’s a lack of access. It’s like, if you’re dyslexic, you have all the information you need, but find it harder to process.” — Orlando Bloom
    4. “If you have kids who are struggling with dyslexia, the greatest gift you can give them is the sense that nothing is unattainable. With dyslexia comes a very great gift, which is the way that your mind can think creatively.” — Orlando Bloom
    5. “When Society allows a dyslexic to sink, through ignorance or prejudice, it is not only the dyslexic who loses.” ― Susan Hampshire
    6. “The normal kid can differentiate between various aspects of life, but a kid with dyslexia has to connect all those dots, and they have to link it like a chain. Teachers can’t incorporate that. They don’t have time; it’s not their fault. They don’t have the resources to give personal attention to each kid in the classroom.” — Malik Yusef
    7. “Dyslexic kids are creative, ‘outside-the-box’ thinkers. They have to be, because they don’t see or solve problems the same way other kids do. In school, unfortunately, they are sometimes written off as lazy, unmotivated, rude or even stupid. They aren’t. It’s not a bad thing to be different. Sometimes, it’s the mark of being very, very talented.” — Rick Riordan

    1. “The real fear that I have for dyslexic people is not that they have to struggle with jumbled input or that they can’t spell, but that they will quit on themselves before they get out of school. Parents have to create victories whenever they can, whether it’s music, sports or art. You want your dyslexic child to be able to say: ‘Yeah, reading’s hard. But I have these other things that I can do.’” — Stephen J. Cannell


    Motivational Quotes on Dyslexia Awareness

    1. “An incredibly high percentage of successful entrepreneurs are dyslexic. That’s one of the little-known facts.” — Malcolm Gladwell
    2. “You can be extremely bright and still have dyslexia. You just have to understand how you learn and how you process information. When you know that, you can overcome a lot of the obstacles that come with dyslexia. When you figure out how you learn, you can accomplish whatever you want.” — Tim Tebow
    3. “I think my dyslexia was a vital part of my development because my inability to read and write meant that I had to find knowledge elsewhere so I looked to the cinema.” — Joe Wright
    4. I had to train myself to focus my attention. I became very visual and learned how to create mental images in order to comprehend what I read.” — Tom Cruise
    5. “I used comedy as a way to combat my dyslexia. I was barely getting by scholastically, so I used a lot of humor.” — Joel McHale
    6. “I started making houses for ants because I thought they needed somewhere to live. Then I made them shoes and hats. It was a fantasy world I escaped to where my dyslexia didn’t hold me back and my teachers couldn’t criticize me. That’s how my career as a micro-sculptor began.” — Willard Wigan
    7. “If I wasn’t dyslexic, I probably wouldn’t have won the Games. If I had been a better reader, then that would have come easily [and] sports would have come easily. And I never would have realized that the way you get ahead in life is hard work.” — Caitlyn Jenner

    1. “I have to work extra hard because I am dyslexic. People said that I couldn’t be an actress, but I’m proving them wrong. Acting has helped me overcome the challenge.” — Bella Thorne
    2. “We are the visionaries, inventors, and artists. We think differently, see the world differently, and solve problems differently. It is from this difference that the dyslexic brain derives its brilliance.” ― Tiffany Sunday
    3. “I like to think I have a superpower called dyslexia. I am creative, intuitive, and empathetic. I am great with problem-solving, and I can think outside the box.” ― Lorin Morgan-Richards


    Emotional Experiences and Quotes on Dyslexia

    1. “Being dyslexic, I was told that I was an idiot all the time.” — David Bailey
    2. “When I had dyslexia, they didn’t diagnose it as that. It was frustrating and embarrassing. I could tell you a lot of horror stories about what you feel like on the inside.” — Nolan Ryan
    3. “Kids made fun of me because I was dark skinned, had a wide nose, and was dyslexic. Even as an actor, it took me a long time to realize why words and letters got jumbled in my mind and came out differently.” — Danny Glover
    4. “I was dyslexic before anybody knew what dyslexia was. I was called ‘slow’. It’s an awful feeling to think of yourself as ‘slow’ – it’s horrible.” — Robert Benton
    5. “My family was absolutely supportive. I did have a fear of cold reads because of my dyslexia, but my family’s support and reading classes really helped me overcome my fear!” — Bella Thorne
    6. “I guess through my learning disability, through dyslexia, I’ve always been a visual learner – I take in everything through my eyes.” — Scoot McNairy
    7. “I’m dyslexic, although they didn’t have a word for it when I was in grade school. The teachers said I had ‘word blindness.'” — Debbie Macomber
    8. “When I was a kid they didn’t call it dyslexia. They called it you know, you were slow, or you were retarded, or whatever. What you can never change is the effect that the words ‘dumb’ and ‘stupid’ have on young people. I knew I wasn’t stupid, and I knew I wasn’t dumb. My mother told me that. If you read to me, I could tell you everything that you read. They didn’t know what it was. They knew I wasn’t lazy, but what was it?” — Whoopi Goldberg

    1. “Dyslexia, though, made me realise that people who say, “but you can’t do that” aren’t actually very important. I don’t take “no” too seriously.” — Richard Rogers
    2. “Though my parents assured me over and over again that I wasn’t stupid or slow, I sensed that my dyslexia was now a stigma on all of us.” — Carre Otis
    3. “I hated school… One of the reasons was a learning disability, dyslexia, which no one understood at the time. I still can’t spell” — Loretta Young
    4. “I was never good at sports. I was never good at exams, because they didn’t understand dyslexia.” — Ozzy Osbourne
    5. “I was on the whole considerably discouraged by my school days… It is not pleasant to feel oneself so completely outclassed and left behind at the very beginning of the race.” — Winston Churchill
    6. “I, myself, was always recognized . . . as the “slow one” in the family. It was quite true, and I knew it and accepted it. Writing and spelling were always terribly difficult for me. My letters were without originality. I was . . . an extraordinarily bad speller and have remained so until this day.” — Agatha Christie
    7. “I couldn’t read. I just scraped by. My solution back then was to read classic comic books because I could figure them out from the context of the pictures. Now I listen to books on tape.” — Charles R. Schwab
    8. “My coping mechanism with my dyslexia is to use wit and humor.” — Max Brooks
    9. “I grew up in a school system . . . where nobody understood the meaning of learning disorder. In the West Indies, I was constantly being physically abused because the whipping of students was permitted.” — Harry Belafonte

    1. “The biggest problem with dyslexic kids is not the perceptual problem, it is their perception of themselves. That was my biggest problem.” — Bruce Jenner
    2. “I never read in school. I got really bad grades-D’s and F’s and C’s in some classes, and A’s and B’s in other classes. In the second week of the 11th grade, I just quit. When I was in school, it was really difficult. Almost everything I learned, I had to learn by listening. My report cards always said that I was not living up to my potential.” — Cher
    3. “Being very dyslexic I couldn’t even tie my own shoe laces until the age of 21 and I struggled at school.” — Leo Sayer
    4. “The looks, the stares, the giggles . . . I wanted to show everybody that I could do better and also that I could read.” — Magic Johnson
    5. “My father was an angry and impatient teacher and flung the reading book at my head.” — William Butler Yeats


    Funny Quotes on Dyslexia

    1. “If you’re cross-eyed and have dyslexia, can you see okay?” — John Mendoza
    2. “Scrabble was invented by Nazis to piss off kids with dyslexia.” — Eddie Izzard
    3. “The one advantage of being dyslexic is that you are never tempted to look back and idealise your childhood.” — Richard Rogers


    List of Dyslexia related days observed worldwide

    DateDay
    8 OctoberWorld Dyslexia Day
    First full week of OctoberDyslexia Awareness Week
    October-Full MonthDyslexia Awareness Month


    Hello!

    Thanks for reading. Hope you liked my collection. Do you have any suggestions, experiences or innovative ideas to share? They would be super helpful!

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