There are no products in your shopping cart.
EFD Conference: Recruiting and retaining people with dyslexia
11th October 2007, 1:00am - 00:01am, Central London
Dyslexia affects 1 in 10 people in the UK and is a combination of abilities and difficulties that affect the learning process in one or more of reading, writing and spelling. However, with the right support and reasonable adjustments dyslexia need not pose a barrier to success in employment.
This event is designed to equip you with an understanding of the issues relating to dyslexia, dispelling the myths and social stigmas that are linked to this often misunderstood disability.
The workshop will make it easier for you to recruit and retain people with dyslexia, focussing on reasonable adjustments in the workplace and making your internal processes barrier-free.
We will be asking questions such as:
- Testing for dyslexia - who is responsible, when and at what stage?
- What is a dyslexia assessment and what can you be expected to get from it?
- What is a reasonable adjustment for someone with dyslexia?
- What working arrangements should you make in terms of written and verbal communication, time and work planning?
Why attend?
This event enables you to:
- Understand what dyslexia is, how it affects individuals and their day to day activities.
- Know what you reasonably need to do to ensure that you do not discriminate against people with dyslexia.
- Learn from real life case studies, including personal and organisational perspectives of managing dyslexia.
- Recognise what reasonable adjustments can be made to ensure that recruitment processes are barrier free to people with dyslexia.
- Work in groups and apply best practice solutions based on real examples to your own workplace
Who should attend?
Suitable for all line managers. In particular those responsible for recruitment, those tasked with designing recruitment policy, HR and personnel managers, IT staff, training specialists, diversity and disability practitioners.
Member login & registration
Disability news
May 2012
- Charity shop donation drive backed by Scope
- Microsoft Kinect to help diagnose autism
- Disability benefits changes to go ahead, says Iain Duncan Smith
- Sunderland worker 'set up to fail' by employers
- New ambassadors to help disabled people in the community
- ADHD sufferers face difficulty 'getting diagnosed'
- Employers are 'unaware' of Access to Work schemes
- Disabled people to get online training for public appointments
- Price comparison websites 'let down' disabled consumers
- Growth needed in care sector, says Carers UK






