Spring Special '26: Fighting for people with dyslexia, with Teresa May, Ph.D.

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Spring Special '26: Fighting for people with dyslexia, with Teresa May, Ph.D.

Amplify Education

08 April 2026

In this episode of Science of Reading: The Podcast, Susan is joined by executive director of the Margaret Byrd Rawson Institute, Teresa May, Ph.D. Teresa shares her powerful story, from being a student with dyslexia to fighting systemic barriers in education. Teresa and Susan also discuss Teresa's legal advocacy for her sons' right to appropriate dyslexia education; the legacy of Margaret Byrd Rawson, a groundbreaking activist who dedicated her life to helping students with dyslexia success; and the importance of early intervention and understanding each child's unique learning needs. Show notes: Download the Dyslexia Support Power Pack.Listen to Science of Reading Essentials: Dyslexia.Learn more about the Margaret Byrd Rawson Institute.Follow the Rawson Institute on Instagram.Like the Rawson Institute on Facebook.Connect with the Rawson Institute on LinkedIn.Listen to Season 2 of Amplify's Beyond My Years podcast.Join our community Facebook group.Connect with Susan Lambert.Quotes: "There's no time to waste. A child only gets one childhood." —Teresa May "You teach this complex language as it is to the child, as he or she is. If you do that, you don't leave anyone behind." —Teresa May "There is a science and an approach that we can take to help kids learn how to read." —Teresa May "[People] remember the kindness of a teacher or the meanness, but they don't remember the explicit way they learned [to read]." —Teresa May Timestamps*: 00:00 Introduction: Fighting for learners with dyslexia, with Teresa May 04:00 Teresa's childhood struggles with dyslexia 07:00 The moment of discovery: Finding Margaret Byrd Rawson 09:00 Meeting Margaret: "There is a key, but not many people hold that key" 14:00 The legal battle begins—fighting for her sons' education 19:00 Taking the case through courts and starting parent advocacy 22:00 Margaret Byrd Rawson as an educational pioneer 27:00 Margaret's biological background and the start of her longitudinal research in the 1930s 30:00 The 55-year study following 56 boys: groundbreaking research without technology 33:00 The human impact of good teaching 39:00 The Margaret Byrd Rawson Institute's mission and current projects 44:00 The complexity of dyslexia remediation 45:00 Final thoughts on advocating for children with dyslexia *Timestamps are approximate, rounded to nearest minute