Parents are often the first to notice that "something doesn't seem
right." If your child is struggling at school with reading,
writing or spelling, you may have been told that they have a ‘learning
disability'...but consider the possibility that they may be dyslexic.
Heather created this piece to help other dyslexic kids recognise that having the
visual thought process is an amazing positive ability, not a negative one.
By acknowledging her different processing style and learning how to use it and work with it,
Heather was able to complete her HSC. Previously, due to her struggle to retain information
and overwhelming anxiety, she had little hope for a good outcome.
Heather created and produced this clay stop-animation for her major HSC artwork. Her HSC
mark for Art was 87/100 (high band 5) and she is hoping to take this talent further into tertiary study.
I am proud to have worked with Heather to help her realise her potential and have a future that is positive, creative and fulfilling.
Common learning disabilities
Dyslexia - a language-based disability in which a
person has trouble understanding written words. It may also be referred to
as reading disability or reading disorder.
Dyscalculia - a mathematical disability in which a
person has a difficult time solving arithmetic problems and grasping math
concepts.
Dysgraphia - a writing disability in which a person finds it hard
to form letters or write within a defined space.
Auditory and Visual
Processing disorders - sensory disabilities in which a person
has difficulty understanding language despite normal hearing and vision.
Auditory Sequential Processing Dysfunction - may be identified by speech and language
problems, sensitivity to sounds, poor attention, difficulty following
directions, difficulty expressing oneself, difficulty with listening
comprehension as well as reading comprehension, difficulty with social
interactions, or auditory self-stimulation, such as constant humming or
self-talk.
Children who have had a history of ear infections or chronic middle ear
fluid are at a higher risk for having difficulties in auditory perception
and processing.
Phonic or Decoding Problems - Phonics is the
ability to identify that there is a relationship between the individual
sounds (phonemes) of the spoken language and the letters (graphemes) of
the written language. Decoding is being able to use visual, syntactic, or
semantic cues to make meaning from words and sentences.
Poor phonological awareness - Phonological
awareness involves the detection and manipulation of sounds at three
levels of sound structure
Gifted but Disabled - This group is easily identified as gifted
because of high achievement or high IQ scores. As they grow older,
discrepancies widen between expected and actual performance. These
students may impress teachers with their verbal abilities, while their
spelling or handwriting contradicts the image
Poor short term
memory - Short-term memory
(STM) is a temporary store for information. The information in this store
will later either be forgotten or, if important, transferred to our
long-term memory store. Poor short-term memory, especially in the visual and auditory
modalities, is often associated with dyslexia.
Poor working memory - Working memory is the ability to
actively hold information in the mind needed to do complex tasks such as
reasoning, comprehension and learning.
What is a Learning
Disability?
A learning
disability is a neurological disorder. In simple terms, a learning disability
results from a difference in the way a person's brain is "wired."
Children with learning disabilities are as smart as, or smarter than their
peers. However, they may have difficulty
reading, writing, spelling, reasoning, recalling and/or organizing information
if left to figure things out by themselves, or if taught by conventional methods.
If unaware of a child's learning differences, parents and
teachers may see a child with exceptional qualities who ‘does not try hard
enough'. This could not be further from the truth. The child with a learning
disability exerts great effort to complete difficult tasks. Yet without
adequate supports, they often fail.
If you are aware of the common signs of learning disabilities,
you will be able to recognize potential problems early. The following is a
checklist of characteristics that may point to a learning disability. Most
people will, from time to time, see one or more of these warning signs in their
children. This is normal. If, however, you see several of these characteristics
over a long period of time, consider the possibility of a learning disability. The
most common learning disability is dyslexia, which is a language-based learning
disability.
Preschool
Speaks later than most children
Pronunciation problems
Slow vocabulary growth, often unable to find the right
word
Difficulty rhyming words
Trouble learning numbers, alphabet, days of the week,
colours, shapes
Extremely restless and easily distracted
Trouble interacting with peers
Difficulty following directions or routines
Fine motor skills slow to develop
Grades K-4
Slow to learn the connection between letters and sounds
Confuses basic words (run, eat, want)
Makes consistent reading and spelling errors including
letter reversals (b/d), inversions (m/w),
transpositions (felt/left), and substitutions (house/home)
Transposes number sequences and confuses arithmetic
signs (+, -, x, /, =)
Slow to remember facts
Slow to learn new skills, relies heavily on memorization
Impulsive, difficulty planning
Unstable pencil grip
Trouble learning about time
Poor coordination, unaware of physical surroundings,
prone to accidents
Grades 5-8
Reverses letter sequences (soiled/solid, left/felt)
Slow to learn prefixes, suffixes, root words, and other
spelling strategies
Avoids reading aloud
Trouble with word problems
Difficulty with handwriting
Awkward, fist-like, or tight pencil grip
Avoids writing assignments
Slow or poor recall of facts
Difficulty making friends
Trouble understanding body language and facial
expressions
High School Students and Adults
Continues to spell incorrectly, frequently spells the
same word differently in a single piece of writing
Avoids reading and writing tasks
Trouble summarizing
Trouble with open-ended questions on tests
Weak memory skills
Difficulty adjusting to new settings
Works slowly
Poor grasp of abstract concepts
Either pays too little attention to details or focuses
on them too much
Misreads information
A learning
disability can't be cured or fixed; it is a lifelong issue. With the right
support and intervention, children with learning disabilities can succeed in
school and go on to successful, careers later in life.
The most common learning
disability is dyslexia, which is a language-based learning disability.
There is a
report produced by the American Academy of Paediatrics entitled "Learning
Disabilities, Dyslexia, and Vision," published in the March 2011 issue of
Paediatrics and supported by the American Academy of Ophthalmology, the
American Association for Paediatric Ophthalmology and Strabismus, and the
American Association for Certified Orthoptists, which clearly states that; "language processing and decoding issues
are the cause of primary learning disabilities, not physical eye
problems." They go on to suggest to "avoid
ineffective costly treatments such as vision therapy."
The report
goes on to say: "Often learning disabilities are
difficult for the public to understand and for educators to treat. Vision
problems can interfere with the process of reading, but children with dyslexia
or related learning disabilities have the same visual function and ocular
health as children without such conditions. Learning disabilities, including
dyslexia, are not caused by physical eye problems but rather complex language
processing difficulties."
Solutions...not labels
Professional services
described as DavisTM,Davis Dyslexia Correction®, Davis Symbol Mastery®, Davis
Orientation Counseling®, and Davis Math Mastery® may only be provided by
persons who are employed by a licensed Davis Specialist, or who are trained and
licensed as Davis Facilitators by Davis Dyslexia Association International.