LAWRENCE — There are few things stronger than a mother’s love and perseverance.
Taking an entrepreneurship class at The University of Kansas and simultaneously getting a diagnosis for her dyslexia, Jamee Miller, then in her mid-20s, vividly remembered how her mother would help her with her homework when she was a child.
“She would have me follow along as she would read out loud,” Miller recalled. “Homework took massive amounts of time if she didn’t help me.”
The idea of a pen, similar to how a highlighter is used, came to ...