There are plenty of 'tests for dyslexia' online - some rather simplistic:
Do I Have Dyslexia? - International Dyslexia Association
Others a little more nuanced:
Dyslexic Test | Free Online Am I Dyslexic Quiz
The first link above comes from a charity/non-profit: International Dyslexia Association - …until everyone can read!
The second comes from a company providing "neurodiversity consulting, recruitment and employment support to employers and individuals with dyslexia, dyspraxia, ADHD and autism": Exceptional Individuals | Neurodiverse Recruitment & Employee Support
In the UK the 'debate about diagnosing dyslexia' and other conditions such as ADHD and autism has become highly politicised: Farage sparks furious backlash after claiming children with special educational needs are ‘over diagnosed’ | The Independent and Setting the Record Straight: Why Nigel Farage’s Claims on Children’s Mental Health and SEND Are Deeply Misleading - Codebreakers
Perhaps we need to step back and consider what is 'neurodiversity':
Why there is no such thing as a ‘normal’ brainHaving been diagnosed with ADHD at 38, Howard Timberlake went on a personal quest to discover whether any of us has a “typical” mind.
According to one survey from 2016, around 62 million people across the globe were thought to have an autism spectrum disorder (including Asperger's syndrome), and 63 million had ADHD (though there can be crossover as some with autism can have ADHD and vice versa). That’s not to mention many other conditions – such as dyslexia, Tourette’s and Williams Syndrome (which involves a hypersocial personality) – that are also be due to differences in the brain’s anatomy.
People involved in the diagnosis and discussion of these conditions often use the term “neurodiverse” to describe the differences, and “neurotypical” to describe everyone else. But these terms have a long history and their meaning is constantly evolving.
The word neurodiverse was first coined in 1998 by an Australian sociologist, Judy Singer, who used it in her honours thesis. Shortly afterwards, it was picked up by a US journalist writing in a 1998 edition of The Atlantic, and the term began to evolve from there. As Singer explains to me, her original aim was to draw attention to a wide variety of conditions. “It was a time of incredible sharing and exploration,” she says. “I was just so overwhelmed with all these senses that people had that we didn't even know about – people who couldn’t recognise faces, people with extraordinary synaesthesia. There are so many things in the mind that we never imagined.
“I just thought, this is incredible diversity. With our stupid educational systems, we're trying to lock people into this narrow channel, instead of exploring what this diversity can bring us. We needed a movement, like the feminist movement, and that's where it came from.”
The term has since been employed for many purposes – as a word for empowerment, a means for celebrating qualities some neurological conditions can bring, and as a term of identity. But Singer had never intended for it to be used to describe a particular condition. Instead, she meant to for it to be used in a more general sense, to describe the variety of all brains.
“You cannot have neurodiverse as an adjective to describe anything else except the whole world,” she says. She draws a parallel with “biodiversity”, which is not used for a particular type of plant or animal but the overall variety of every living creature. “It’s the property of the whole biosphere.”
...Diagnoses are essential to ensure that people get the support they need - but there is a risk of "over-medicalising" traits and behaviours (Credit: Emmanuel Lafont)Why there is no such thing as a ‘normal’ brain - BBC Future
Here's a discussion and a video:
And we do have to be careful about the language we use:
Aren't We All on the Neurodiversity Spectrum? - NeuroBridge
Finally, are 'creative' people 'neurodiverse'?
Research Shows Neurodivergent Individuals Excel Creatively | Psychology Today United Kingdom
Creativity, Creative Arts, and Neurodivergence Conference | Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Although, again, we have to be careful with words!
Elon Musk: how being autistic may make him think differently
Is Elon Musk Autistic? Exploring His Traits | Connect n Care
Bill Gates: Trump, Musk and how my neurodiversity made me
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