How To Know Signs That Indicate Your Dyslexic Child Needs Help Before Learning Becomes A Problem

Children learn and develop at their own pace.

“Most students are smart enough, care enough and want to succeed at learning.” – Gayle Moyers

The language skills are listening, speaking, reading, and writing. As a child grows, these skills usually develop in the order listed.

From before birth, the child is listening to his mother’s voice and the sounds in her immediate surroundings. By birth, he recognizes his mother’s voice.

As the people around the baby speaks to him, he listens and imitates the sounds he hears. Within his first year, he begins to speak – first in sounds, then single words, next in phrases, and finally, in sentences.

Learning to read should happen with ease and enjoyment. If a child is loved, well-nourished, gets adequate sleep and rest, and exercises daily, but does not demonstrate progress in mastering the language code to read, there may be specific issues to address.

When a child has trouble reading, he is usually challenged in writing also.

If your child has difficulty learning to read or is significantly slow to progress, there may be specific underlying issues that need to be addressed. In addition, other areas of development may also be lagging behind.

The sooner you discover them, the better.

Here are some general traits and behaviors that indicate your child may be dyslexic:

  • He appears bright, highly intelligent, and articulate but is unable to read, write, or spell at a level with his peers.
  • When called to a conference with his teacher, he is often labeled as lazy, careless, immature, “not trying hard enough,” or “a behavior problem.”
  • During examinations, he does not test well academically even though his IQ is high; when tests are given orally, he gets good results but not when they are written.
  • He is talented in non-academic subjects like art, drama, music, sports, mechanics, storytelling, sales, business, designing, building, or engineering.
  • He struggles in lecture-type classes but learns best through hands-on experience, demonstrations, experimentation, observation, and visual aids.
  • He has difficulty sustaining attention; seems to be “hyper” or a “daydreamer.” When he “zones out,” he seems to lose track of time.
  • When you ask the school administration for help, you are told he isn’t “behind enough” or “bad enough” to be helped in the school setting. Sometimes, it is suggested that you hire an outside tutor.
  • Because he feels dumb, after a while he develops poor self-esteem; hides or covers up his weaknesses with ingenious compensatory strategies; eventually, he becomes easily frustrated and emotional about his school, reading, or testing.

The characteristics you see may vary from day to day or even minute to minute. The most consistent thing about dyslexics is their inconsistency in skill demonstration or responses.

In my next few articles, I’ll highlight other traits and behaviors in specific developmental domains, which may also signal the presence of dyslexia.

Have you lived or worked with children who demonstrated some of these difficulties?

Florence is an Optimist, Encourager, Author, Speaker, Consultant & Mom of the most amazing daughter ever. She shares tips, tools, and resources with parents of dyslexic children to stop the struggle. A believer in the unique learning abilities of all children, she is a strong advocate for those who learn differently.

Please note: I reserve the right to delete comments that are offensive or off-topic.

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4 thoughts on “How To Know Signs That Indicate Your Dyslexic Child Needs Help Before Learning Becomes A Problem

  1. Another factor that causes kids to feel really sad about their difficulty in reading is having a younger sibling who reads with ease. Watching that sibling not struggle with reading causes the older sibling to lose even more self esteem. I have seen families where that is the case and it is very challenging for the older sibling who is struggling to read.

    • This is a tricky situation for parents to navigate; one they must address with utmost care. It is the time to highlight areas in which the older child excels and explain that every child is unique and has different super-powers.

  2. This is a great, full of information post. I work with parents of children who often suffer from a number of the things you mention. It amazes me how often children are labeled (sometimes unconsciously) when there could be an underlying issue. Dyslexia is complex and much more than the “reversing of letters” that many people think it is. Thanks for sharing and spreading your knowledge.

    • You’re welcome, Dr. Jones. Thanks for the work you do with those parents. I am sure their children benefit from the counsel you provide.