WHO IS LIKELY TO HAVE DYSLEXIA?
Dyslexia is genetic and hereditary. People who have family members with dyslexia have about a 50%-60% chance of having dyslexia too.
Dyslexia is NOT caused by low intelligence. In fact, Steven Spielberg, Thomas Edison, Albert Einstein, Walt Disney, Whoopi Goldberg, and many other highly successful people have dyslexia. People with dyslexia tend to be so successful because as children they had to work hard to get through reading. This results in them developing a strong work ethic, which leads to success in their adult.
Dyslexia is a neurobiological condition.
People who have dyslexia use their right side of their brain. People who do not have dyslexia naturally use their left side. The left side of the brain is in charge of language. This is why explicit, intensive phonics instruction is so important for individuals who have dyslexia. The instruction helps them train their brain to use the left side of the brain to read rather than the right side.
WHAT ARE SIGNS OF DYSLEXIA?
Signs of dyslexia include:
more slowly progressing in learning to read
difficulty learning letter sounds & names
difficulty implementing letter sounds while reading
difficulty implementing letter combinations when reading
loosing track of what’s being read while reading
getting tired of reading easily
difficulty with short vowel sounds
having higher than average math abilities and lower than average reading abilities
still reversing letters like b & d in 2nd grade – prior to 2nd grade it is still very common.
While these are common signs of dyslexia, reading is a developmental skill. It’s similar to learning to walk – it happens at everyone’s own pace. So, just because a child exhibits one of these signs it does not mean that they are dyslexic.
Formal testing can identify if the cause is truly dyslexia or not. Formal testing can be done privately or through most schools. An educational diagnostician administers the dyslexia testing.
WHAT IS IT LIKE TO HAVE DYSLEXIA?
Dyslexia is on a continuum. Some people have mild dyslexia while others have severe.
Dyslexia looks different depending on the individual. It may look like letters jumping around on the page rapidly, it may look like a child struggling to remember the short vowel sounds, or it may look like a child struggling to remember certain words they see over and over again.
While it looks different for different people, this simulation can help people without dyslexia experience what it can be like. Time yourself reading the passage with the simulation on. Then, time yourself reading the passage with the simulation off. This exercise helps people who do not have dyslexia understand why accommodations such as extended time to take tests and other tools can be helpful.
WHEN TO TEST FOR DYSLEXIA?