Gajilan, who has worked at Reuters for more than 14 years and was then digital news director, had been reading about artificial intelligence and custom GPTstailored AI models that users could configure for specific tasks. After confirming her data would be private, she fed one of the models Tobey's report cards, neuropsychological evaluations and individualized education programs for his dyslexia. She also gave it his interests: dragons from the book series Wings of Fire, battles with Nerf guns, a song or two from Hamilton.
Students with dyslexia will find out this month if extra time to complete state examinations will be added to the Race scheme for 2026
Most healthy people have no issues telling left from right, but for some people (about 15 percent), left-right confusion is a somewhat common experience in their everyday lives. Common situations in which people confuse left and right every now and then include giving instructions about directions to somebody else who is driving a car, moving the wrong foot during dancing, or taking the wrong direction when hiking.
I never thought I'd write a piece criticising Taylor Swift. I've been a devoted fan since becoming enraptured by her Eras Tour movie. And while my musical tastes normally veer towards post-rock, punk and metal, her pandemic opuses Evermore and Folklore reached parts of my heart I never knew pop could touch. So I genuinely believed Taylor could do no wrong. But unfortunately, her latest website is a masterclass in how not to design for inclusion.
Traditional classrooms, with their rigid pace and one-size-fits-all lessons, left Aarav frustrated and feeling left behind. But everything changed when his parents introduced him to special education technology designed for children like him. With text-to-speech apps and interactive reading games, Aarav began to read with confidence, and for the first time, learning felt possible. Stories like Aarav's highlight why students with unique learning needs deserve more than what conventional systems can provide.