Sir Richard Branson launches free-to-access online university DyslexicU
It will offer courses online for dyslexic and non-dyslexic people to learn about dyslexic thinking.

Sir Richard Branson said āfrom little acorns, oak trees growā as he launched a free-to-access online university with courses to help people with dyslexia learn more about their dyslexic thinking skills and to help non-dyslexic people learn about dyslexic thinking.
The term ādyslexic thinkingā refers to how such minds process information in divergent, creative and lateral ways, and Sir Richard hopes the courses will help dyslexics and non-dyslexics alike to learn more about these skills.
Launched by global charity Made By Dyslexia and Sir Richard, 74, DyslexicU, dubbed the āworldās first University of Dyslexic Thinkingā, will offer free online and on-demand courses.
The initiative was launched by Virginās Sir Richard, and Kate Griggs, founder of Made By Dyslexia, in New York, alongside guests including Princess Beatrice and space scientist Dame Maggie Aderin-Pocock, who are both dyslexic.
Sir Richard, who is dyslexic, told PA news agency: āItās the birth of something which I think could be useful for people who are dyslexic, but not just people who are dyslexic.ā
He also spoke about what he said was a āwonderful change in the last few decadesā, saying: āIf you go back to when I was young, people definitely didnāt celebrate being dyslexic or having a dyslexic child.
āI donāt actually think they knew the word dyslexia ⦠soon after I left school, the word dyslexia came into being and parents panicked, and kids therefore panicked.
āAnd now you turn the clock forward and I think Kate and Made By Dyslexia have done such a wonderful job on this, people celebrate having a dyslexic kid.
āSo, itās been a wonderful change in the last few decades.
āI think with AI, itās suddenly giving dyslexics another whole new boost, because theyāre going to be able to do things that non-dyslexic kids will find slightly more difficult to do, and so AI is going to play a very important part in the world.ā
He explained: āThis doesnāt apply to every single kid, but by and large dyslexic kids are more creative. Theyāre better, I think, at solving problems. We have to be more resilient because we generally have had a tough time when weāre young in conventional education.
āThose are the sorts of skills that you need, that people who are running AI companies need.ā
DyslexicUās launch follows Made By Dyslexiaās Intelligence 5.0 report, with research commissioned by YouGov, which surveyed 5,000 people across the US, UK, India and Australia.
Griggs told PA news agency that the report āvery clearly shows that as weāve moved into the fifth industrial revolution, where artificial intelligence (AI) and human intelligence is working side by side, the intelligence that the world needs is dyslexic thinking skills.ā
She added: āThe top skills that the global recruitment company Randstad found within the report, theyāve done some research looking at what are the top skills needed in every workplace in every sector worldwide, and it is dyslexic thinking skills.
āThe idea of the university is that weāre going to teach people dyslexic thinking.
āIf youāre dyslexic, youāll be able to watch the courses, and itāll help you to realise how you think and why how you think is so valuable.
āAnd if youāre not dyslexic, it will enable you to understand how dyslexic people think, the skills that the world needs, and how you too can develop them.ā
Hosted by The Open University, courses so far include Entrepreneurs & Start-Up Mentality and Changemakers & Activism, with many more planned.
Sir Richard and Made By Dyslexia previously collaborated with LinkedIn to recognise ādyslexic thinkingā as a valuable skill. It has also been recognised as a noun in the dictionary.
He said of DyslexicU: āItās a very small start, but from little acorns, oak trees grow.
āIām looking forward to watching Kate and the team growing beautiful, beautiful oak trees out of all this.ā