A conversation with Cathy on my accepted GLP paper, failed assessment tools, cultural bias, literacy, maths, and the evidence already present in classrooms, case notes, and lives the system has not learned to see.
This morning Cathy and I began with the news of my latest paper—not published yet, but accepted, which matters because it has passed the first gate. The paper asks what counts as evidence for Gestalt Language Processing, but underneath that question is another one: what happens when a field insists on measuring a phenomenon with tools that were never built to recognise it? I talked about the rejections, the desk-review failures, the almost comical way those failures proved the argument I was making. The issue is not merely that some people remain unconvinced. The issue is that they are looking through instruments shaped by the wrong assumptions, then treating the absence of recognition as the absence of evidence.
From there, the conversation moved into diagnostic and assessment tools more broadly—the way autism is still missed when the person in front of the clinician does not resemble the narrow cultural image the tool expects. I spoke about girls in high school who are plainly autistic, who need accommodations, who carry sensory overwhelm and language strain and social exhaustion, but who are dismissed because they are friendly, helpful, chatty, enculturated. Eye contact becomes evidence against them. Having a boyfriend becomes evidence against them. Success becomes evidence against them. The system mistakes adaptation for absence, and then weaponises the very survival strategies it taught them to perform.
Cathy and I then circled back to Gestalt Language Processing itself, and to the strange insistence that evidence is lacking when the evidence is everywhere—only not always in the form the gatekeepers have decided to count. There is the older research. There are the clinicians. There are the case notes. There are therapists across countries seeing the same patterns in children who process language, maths, classrooms, relationships, and environments as wholes before parts. And there is my own school data, the students who arrive in high school still stuck around fourth-grade literacy because they have survived on sight-word memory without ever being given functional decoding. I described what happens when I place unfamiliar words in front of them—not because I care whether they can pronounce milieu or macaque, but because I want to see what the task does to their body, their confidence, their emotional field, their sense of being caught out.
That led us into education more generally, especially maths, where the same error repeats. Schools often demand the visible procedure before they understand the thinking. Students who can see the answer, who can perceive the relation whole, are penalised because they do not show their working in the approved sequence. I talked about teaching through story: logarithms through Napier, navigation, earthquakes, pH scales; the unit circle through clocks and quarter-turns; imaginary numbers not as nonsense but as the turn that lets a line become a plane. I came back again to the same pedagogy I keep finding myself defending: give them the whole of it first, let the story hold the structure, and then the parts can begin to make sense.
By the end, the conversation had become less about one paper and more about the larger work it belongs to. This paper is a step in a longer arc: first, establishing that gestalt processors are here; now, challenging whether the tools used to measure us are valid at all; later, perhaps, helping build something better. Cathy’s practice, my classroom, the research record, the patterns in children and adults who were misread for years—all of it points toward the same demand. Evidence is not absent. It has been excluded. And if the field wants to keep asking where the evidence is, then it must first answer for the instruments, assumptions, and hierarchies that taught it not to see.
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