By
Schwab Foundation for Learning
If parents, teachers and other professionals discover
a child's learning disability early and provide the
right kind of help, it can give the child a chance to
develop skills needed to lead a successful and productive
life. A recent National Institutes of Health study showed
that 67 percent of young students who were at risk for
reading difficulties became average or aboveŅaverage
readers after receiving help in the early grades.
If you are aware of the common signs of learning disabilities,
you will be able to recognize potential problems early.
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.
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, colors,
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 compositions
- 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
All contents ® and 1997, 1998, 1999 Schwab
Foundation for Learning
All Rights Reserved
Any interested person or organization may copy or reprint
portions of this article provided such copy may not
be sold or otherwise used for commercial purposes and
any such copy must contain the above stated copyright
notice.
[ Check
Out Our Message
Boards |
Back to Experts' Advice | Ask
A Question ]
|