Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Symptoms of Dyslexia

I am bringing over my articles from Examiner, in the hopes that they may help or give you information you need or were not aware of. I start with dyslexia, because my son has it, and now we think my youngest may, as well. So it is a subject I know a bit about.

See if this sounds like your child:

He is very bright, but doesn't meet his potential. It takes him longer to do his homework then you think it should. His penmanship is messy, floating either above or below the line. His spelling is almost indecipherable, vowels are almost nonexistent. He is behind in reading and/or math, has had extra help and his academics just aren't improving.

If this sounds like your child, you might want to check out dyslexia.

Dyslexia is not recognized by many school districts, and chances are you will be told it is a "medical diagnosis" that the school isn't prepared to make. They may instead guide you to remediation for the individual areas in which your child is behind. This may work. But understand if dyslexia is the problem, it is not just merely an academic issue. It is a question of how your child's brain works to process information. Language is processed differently; Broca's area, responsible for speech production, and Wernike's area, responsible for understanding spoken language, have neurons connected differently. the Right Hemisphere of the brain is 10% larger. So there are actual physical differences with dyslexia. This can cause sequences, such as a reciting the alphabet, counting or rote memorization such as multiplication tables to be very difficult. It isn't the child, it's his brain.

Most parents are under the impression that a child with dyslexia will have trouble with spelling, and that's true. But there are so many more symptoms. The most common and publicized symptom is reversal of letters, but not for the reason most think. The child doesn''t see the word backwards. Due to their visual processing problem, that is often present with dyslexia, the child sees the word the right way, but writes or reads it wrong. Don't panic, if your child reverses letters early as they are learning to read and write. Many children do this. The concern would be if the reversals continue past the first couple of years.

Some other symptoms include:

  • * oral language (stuttering)
  • * articulation issues (trouble with L's, R's, M's and N's, S, sh, ch)
  • * auditory processing in how many sounds held onto
  • * significant auditory discrimination problems
  • * phonemic awareness problems
  • * reading difficulty (in processing language with his eyes)
  • * writing difficulty (language with hands, penmanship)
  • * trouble tying shoes
  • * difficulty with left & right
  • * difficulty sounding out new words
  • * can read a word fine on a page, then turn the page and not recognize it

There is no hard and fast test for dyslexia. But if your child has some of these symptoms, you may want to pursue help from an educational psychologist. Or, you can treat the symptoms with some coping skills. I am working on a pst about the various interventions available for the treatment of dyslexia. Stay tuned!

For more information:

Overcoming Dyslexia
bright solutions

T, who says reversals and reading problems are the tip of the iceberg

photo copyright Tina Cruz
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

4 sent chocolate:

Spot said...

Great article! My two children without autism are dyslexic. Sean has had way more trouble with it then Molly. His handwriting is so illegible that sometimes even he can't read it. Thank goodness for computers!

♥Spot

TONY LETTS said...

good summation of it!

Outsourcing Guide said...

This is a very informative article. I am not also aware about dyslexia and your post is a big help. Thank you for sharing it.

Anonymous said...

Great list! However. I want people to know that even if your child is a fantastic reader, they may have a related disorder if they have all the non-reading symptoms listed (underachiever, horrible penmenship and spelling, doesn't know left from right, trouble tying shoes, difficulty with math). That's me. I could read at least three years above grade level but was horrible at math and had many other learning issues. I never got any help. The good news is that half way through High School I matured ennough to work around my issues. I ended up with excellent grades in college and graduated from Law School with honors. But those grade school years were horrible. So, just because the reading is there and there well, doesn't mean that there is no issue. These other items (again, fantastic list) by themselves need help.

Related Posts with Thumbnails
 
Clicky Web Analytics