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Dyslexia primarily affects the skills involved in accurate and fluent word reading and spelling.
This is a list of general signs that might indicate dyslexia for children aged 7 to 11.
If your child has problems with some of these tasks, it may be that they just need more help and opportunities to practice. Use the list of activities in the next section and our 'Learning Tracks' to help guide you. Be patient, proceed at your child's pace and make an extra effort to keep it fun.
Decide if you should seek a dyslexia assessment from an expert through your child's school if your observations mostly match the ones given. Note that all children make these mistakes initially but a dyslexic child might continue to have these problems.
If your think your child is dyslexic, there's a lot of help and guidance available which you should make use of. You can play a major part in helping your child manage the difficulties caused by dyslexia.
Taking positive action early on, against dyslexia will dramatically help your child's development. Many parents have done this and many dyslexic people do go on to succeed in many different ways.
By the time a child starts school they already could have had up to 10,000 hours of valuable parental interaction. This amount of parental interaction has a direct effect on a child's ability to learn.
A dyslexic child starting school with a low level of parental help is at a huge disadvantage.
Children showing signs of dyslexia require more parental support to develop the reading, writing and comprehension skills they need to succeed in school and life.
Let them play pouring water from one cup to another whilst spilling as little water as possible.
Have regular trips to the playground.
Children's learning does not only happen at school, for a child to become a confident at reading and writing takes parental support at home.
Don't make the mistake of thinking what your child does at school is enough. If want help, use our Learning Tracks to guide you on the best ways you can help your child using fun activities and games.
Before a dyslexic child is diagnosed dyslexic, it can be a difficult period. Sometimes, parents, and teachers, can become frustrated with the child.
As one parent told us, "because they were clearly intelligent in some areas, it looked to me that they weren't trying hard enough when it came to activities like reading. Eventually, I would run out of patience and would become frustrated with them."
Frustration is also something that the child goes through. No matter how much they try, they can't do what others appear to do so easily! Over time, this can impact their self-esteem and they begin to believe that they cannot succeed.
Obtaining a diagnosis of dyslexia can help parents a lot. They realise the behaviour that frustrated them was not due to their child's laziness or 'bad attitude'.
Parents with dyslexia face additional difficulties in supporting their children's learning.
Dyslexic parents often have some school memories they would rather forget. Schools then were not geared up to identifying dyslexic children or providing help. All too often schools incorrectly labelled them as 'stupid'. Unsurprisingly, dyslexic parents can be distrusting of schools.
The dyslexic parents we spoke to, desperately wanted to help their children enjoy school more then they did but were unsure how.
If you are one of these parents then your challenge is to believe your child can have a better experience than you did and this means trusting the school system and your child's teachers. The good news is that schools have changed... the 'synthetic phonics' method for learning to read suits dyslexics better. It will require dedicated practice by your child relying on your help.
Why not learn together with your child? We will guide you.
Our Learning Tracks are based on 'learning through play' and this has many advantages for dyslexic parents and dyslexic children.
Dyslexic children need extra support from their parents so find out more about dyslexia.
Always remember that dyslexia is not an intellectual disability. The proof of this, is that there are countless examples of successful dyslexic people from Albert Einstein to Sir Richard Branson.
Find an activity that your child can excel at or really enjoys. It could be swimming, running, football, art, cooking... anything. That way your child will always know they are good at something. This will help balance out the times when they might find themselves struggling at school.
A computer screen reader is the way we recommend dyslexic parents to read out content. A computer screen reader can open up a world of help on the internet. Don't forget about sites such as YouTube.
Dyslexic people are often more creative, so let them have regular ways of expressing and practicing their creativity. Nurture their creativity, creativity is a valuable skill that not many people have!
Dyslexic people find it harder to read when they are tired so helping your child stick to a good sleep routine will help them cope better at school.
Use a spell checker when doing homework.
Spell checkers and text-to-speech systems offer help to dyslexic children. They can be used to support reading, writing and learning.
"Dyslexia Action", The biggest UK dyslexia charity.
"Dyslexia: A Parents' Survival Guide", A parent told us this is a valuable book for parents with dyslexic children, by Christine Ostler.
"Successful Dyslexic People", Proof that dyslexic people can succeed. dyslexic.com
"What Subjects Do Dyslexic Students Study at University?", by Abi James from dyslexia-test.com
"What's It Like Being Dyslexic?", being a dyslexic child at school -
Jackie Stewart (the retired F1 racing driver champion) describes being a dyslexic child at school before dyslexia was diagnosed -
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