There is such a vast difference between someone "not academic in the slightest" and someone who is actively limited by severe learning disabilities. I'm sure you mean well by this statement, but I feel like it leads to the attitude that even the disabled just aren't trying hard enough, and if they'd only pull themselves up by their bootstraps the problems in the article would go away.
I find it borderline condescending that so many comments below are just handwaving this as "he should just be a plumber!" as if plumbers don't need to take training classes or remember specific technical details. If you're reading this thread and wondering why manual trades are undervalued in the US and also suggesting gp's son become an electrician, you're part of the problem.
>despite putting forth his best effort because he simply can't remember anything
Acting like this person should apprentice as a programmer as some have suggested is wishing the problem away.
I certainly don't think "the disabled just aren't trying hard enough", I think you are extrapolating quite wildly there and I find the implication quite offensive.
The point I was trying to make is that having supportive parents can really help, and the poster is obviously very supportive of his son.
Every situation is different though.
I find it borderline condescending that so many comments below are just handwaving this as "he should just be a plumber!" as if plumbers don't need to take training classes or remember specific technical details. If you're reading this thread and wondering why manual trades are undervalued in the US and also suggesting gp's son become an electrician, you're part of the problem.
>despite putting forth his best effort because he simply can't remember anything
Acting like this person should apprentice as a programmer as some have suggested is wishing the problem away.