R I P Jonathan Bryan 2006-2025

Jonathan passed away this summer.

I first contacted him in 2020 to ask if I could use his poem (shared below) in the introduction to my book Music, Sound and Vibration in Special Education, published by Routledge.

His reply confirmed what I had long believed while working with children labelled as having complex needs: behind their eyes, there is always more within them, waiting to be shared — if only we can find the key.

Jonathan showed the world what is possible when we refuse to accept low expectations. In the video above, he explains how he used an E-tran frame—a low-tech communication tool that enables people with speech and physical difficulties to select symbols or letters using only their eye movements.

In my books and magazine articles I also refer to high-tech eye gaze computer systems, which many children use with great success. But Jonathan’s eyes moved too quickly for those systems to register. That never stopped him. Instead, he harnessed the tools available to him, proving that determination and the right support can unlock potential that labels like “PMLD” too often try to write off.

When I asked to include his poem, Jonathan graciously replied:

“Dear Angelique, Thank you for sending your introduction. I am happy for my message—that all children should be taught to read and write regardless of their educational label—to be included in your book. The pernicious label PMLD, as you point out, is used to reduce expectations, and very few people with that label are given a literacy education. I only learnt to read and write because I was taken out of my special school to be taught literacy by my mother, and I continue to campaign as a voice for the voiceless so that other PMLD students can be taught in school.”

Jonathan went on to found the charity Teach Us Too, giving a platform to the belief that every child has the right to literacy, communication, and high expectations.

I was honoured to include his poem in my book, and again in a magazine article I wrote in 2023, with his permission. Most of all, I feel honoured to have connected with such an extraordinary young man whose legacy continues to inspire. Here is his poem.

PMLD

We are not capable of learning

So do not tell me

There’s something going on behind the disability.

Treated as useless handicaps

Minds with nothing in there, tragically

Stuck in a wheelchair,

Disabilities visibly crippling –

Just incontinent and dribbling,

We are not

Academically able.

You should make our minds

Stagnate in special education!

We cannot

Learn to read,

Learn to spell,

Learn to write,

Instead let us

Be constrained by a sensory curriculum.

It is not acceptable to say

We have the capacity to learn.

School should occupy us, entertain us; but never teach us

You are deluded to believe that

Our education can be looked at another way!

NOW READ IT AGAIN BACKWARDS.

Please visit www.teachustoo.org.uk to find out more about Jonathan and his charity.

angelique5

Ange Anderson is a visionary educational consultant who has revolutionized therapeutic and technological support for the neuro-divergent community. Her innovative methods have been widely recognized and she has appeared on many podcasts worldwide and spoken at educational conferences across the world. She is the former headteacher of a leading specialist school and now supports schools and parents on site / at home, as well as remotely. As well as writing academic papers she writes for magazines catering for those who are neuro-divergent. She is the author of special educational books published by Routledge . Her book on utilizing virtual reality as a tool for those with unique minds has been translated into Arabic expanding her impact to international markets. She is an esteemed advisor to a leading global VR company. VR was the catalyst for her latest book ‘The Cosmic Caretaker’. She has also self-published several children's books and both edited and contributed to 'The Future of Special Schools'.