What is Dyslexia?

Common Characteristics of Dyslexia include difficulties with:

  • Word identification and decoding of unfamiliar words
  • Oral reading (slow, inaccurate, choppy)
  • Spelling
  • Reading comprehension
  • Written expression

Signs of Dyslexia by Age

  • Description text goes hereTrouble learning common nursery rhymes, such as “Jack and Jill”

    • Difficulty learning (and remembering) the names of letters in the alphabet

    • Seems unable to recognize letters in his/her own name

    • Mispronounces familiar words; persistent “baby talk”

    • Doesn’t recognize rhyming patterns like cat, bat, rat

    • A family history of reading and/or spelling difficulties (dyslexia often runs in families)

    © Sally Shaywitz, Overcoming Dyslexia, p. 122

  • Difficulties

    • Reading errors that show no connection to the sounds of the letters on the page

    • Does not understand that words come apart

    • Complains about how hard reading is or “disappears” when it is time to read

    • A history of reading problems in parents or siblings

    • Cannot sound out even simple words like cat, map, nap

    • Does not associate letters with sounds, such as the letter b with the (b) sound

    Strengths

    • Curiosity

    • Great imagination

    • Ability to figure things out; gets the gist of things

    • Eager to embrace new ideas

    • A good understanding of new concepts

    • Surprising maturity

    • A larger vocabulary than typical for age group

    • Enjoys solving puzzles

    • Talent for building models

    • Excellent comprehension of stories read or told to him

    © Sally Shaywitz, Overcoming Dyslexia, p. 122-123

  • Reading

    • Very slow in acquiring reading skills. Reading is slow and awkward

    • Trouble reading unfamiliar words, often making wild guesses because they cannot sound out the word

    • Doesn’t seem to have a strategy for reading new words

    • Avoids reading out loud

    Speaking

    • Searches for a specific word and ends up using vague language,  such as “stuff” or “thing,” without naming the object

    • Pauses, hesitates, and/or uses lots of “um’s” when speaking

    • Confuses words that sound alike, such as saying “tornado” for “volcano,” substituting “lotion” for “ocean”

    • Mispronunciation of long, unfamiliar or complicated words

    • Seems to need extra time to respond to questions

    School and Life

    • Trouble remembering dates, names, telephone numbers, random lists

    • Struggles to finish tests on time

    • Extreme difficulty learning a foreign language

    • Poor spelling

    • Messy handwriting

    • Low self-esteem that may not be immediately visible

    Strengths

    • Excellent thinking skills: conceptualization, reasoning, imagination, abstraction

    • Learning that is accomplished best through meaning rather than rote memorization

    • Ability to get the “big picture”

    • A high level of understanding of what is read to him/her

    • The ability to read and to understand at a high level overlearned (or highly practiced) words in a special area of interest; for example, if he or she loves cooking they may be able to read food magazines and cookbooks

    • Improvement as an area of interest becomes more specialized and focused—and a miniature vocabulary is developed that allows for reading in that subject area

    • A surprisingly sophisticated listening vocabulary

    • Excels in areas not dependent on reading, such as math, computers and visual arts, or in more conceptual (versus fact-driven) subjects, including philosophy, biology, social studies, neuroscience and creative writing

    © Sally Shaywitz, Overcoming Dyslexia, p. 123-125

  • Reading

    • A childhood history of reading and spelling difficulties

    • While reading skills have developed over time, reading still requires great effort and is done at a slow pace

    • Rarely reads for pleasure

    • Slow reading of most materials—books, manuals, subtitles in films

    • Avoids reading aloud

    Speaking

    • Earlier oral language difficulties persist, including a lack of fluency and glibness; frequent use of “um’s” and imprecise language; and general anxiety when speaking

    • Often pronounces the names of people and places incorrectly; trips over parts of words

    • Difficulty remembering names of people and places; confuses names that sound alike

    • Struggles to retrieve words; frequently has “It was on the tip of my tongue” moments

    • Rarely has a fast response in conversations; struggles when put on the spot

    • Spoken vocabulary is smaller than listening vocabulary

    • Avoids saying words that might be mispronounced

    School and Life

    • Despite good grades, often says he’s dumb or is concerned that peers think he’s dumb

    • Penalized by multiple-choice tests

    • Frequently sacrifices social life for studying

    • Suffers extreme fatigue when reading

    • Performs rote clerical tasks poorly

    Strengths

    • Maintains strengths noted during the school-age years

    • Has a high capacity to learn

    • Shows noticeable improvement when given additional time on multiple-choice examinations

    • Demonstrates excellence when focused on a highly specialized area, such as medicine, law, public policy, finance, architecture or basic science

    • Excellent writing skills if the focus is on content, not spelling

    • Highly articulate when expressing ideas and feelings

    • Exceptional empathy and warmth

    • Successful in areas not dependent on rote memory

    • A talent for high-level conceptualization and the ability to come up with original insights

    • Inclination to think outside of the box and see the big picture

    • Noticeably resilient and able to adapt

    © Sally Shaywitz, Overcoming Dyslexia, p. 125-127cription