 |

|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|








|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Some common dyslexia characteristics in children
This checklist is not an assessment. Each dyslexic individual is different
therefore you will probably find that only some of the characteristics
apply.
- Behaviour
- Reading
- Handwriting
- Spelling
- Writing composition
- Punctuation
- Maths
- Talents
Behaviour
- Daydreams or drifts off into own private world
Forgets easily, particularly recent things but may have a good memory
for things which happened a long time ago
- Finds it difficult to deal with more than one instruction at a time
- Extremes in mood, lack of calm middle ground
Little sense of time
- Can be very stubborn
- Can be quiet, withdrawn and anxious
- Doesnt like change
- Has tantrums
- Easily distracted
- Intolerant of noise
- Appears not to listen
- May have speech problems
- May lack co-ordination and spill things or knock things over
- May have allergies
- May have stress related illnesses
- A child might seem to be completely different when attending school
to how they were pre-school.
Reading
- Cannot master reading at all or mastered it very late
- Can read to self but out loud makes lots of mistakes
- Can read stories but has problems with exam questions and anything
technical
- Can read perfectly but doesnt get much meaning from what has
been read
- Needs to re-read to make sense
Skips lines
- Loses place
- Dislikes reading and tries to avoid it
Starts OK but gets progressively worse
- Reverses syllables or words
- Leaves out, misreads or substitutes small words such as was
and they
- Can read a word on one page and misread the same word on another.
Handwriting
- Handwriting may be illegible
- Handwriting legible only if very slow
Heavy pressure on page (presses very hard with pen or pencil)
- Difficulties joining letters
- Strange spacing
- Letters formed strangely to disguise spelling problems
- Writing process highly stressful and very tiring.
Spelling
- Words spelt as they sound
- Bizarre spelling producing unrecognisable words
- Letters repeated: rememember for remember
- Letters left out rember for remember
- Letters reversed brid for bird
- Mistakes made with small words such as thay for they
- Spellings rote learnt for tests but cant then apply them in
writing.
Writing composition
- Writing disorganised and writer gets lost in the process
- Difficulties starting
- Sentences muddled
- Content pictured as a whole but unable to get it down sequentially
- Thoughts too fast for pen
- Small words missed or used wrongly
- Frequent crossings out
- Writer cant see mistakes
- Finds writing is immensely frustrating and will be avoided where possible
- Finds writing is a slow process and may involve many drafts if despair
doesnt set it first.
Punctuation
- Punctuation is not used at all
- Some punctuation is used but is not understood
- Writer has no sense of where the marks should go, even though they
have been told.
Maths
- May be excellent at maths
- May find all of maths difficult
- Cannot grasp what is required from the maths question
- Loses track when following procedures e.g. long multiplication
- Directional difficulties e.g. instead of going from right to left
with addition, subtraction and multiplication, will work the other way
- Gets muddled between maths symbols
- Difficulties learning times tables
Problems with place value (hundreds, tens and units)
- Reverses numbers
- Makes many small mistakes
- Finds mental maths difficult because the sum goes before
the calculation is complete
- Can get the answers but cant show the workings out.
Talents
- Often have excellent people skills
- Can be good at problem solving
- Can think three dimensionally giving rise to talents in such areas
as design, computing, acting etc.
- Can be very good at sport
- Can be good at art, particularly 3D
- Are often highly intuitive
- Are very curious about how things work
- Highly aware of their environment and often notice details
- Thinks in an original way
- Thinks holistically
- Often very good at lego as a child.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For
more information contact:
Hilary
Farmer M.A. & Associates
Woodside, Badger Lane,
Hinksey Hill, Oxford, OX1 5BE, UK
Tel:
01865 326464
Email: farmer@dyslexia-uk.org
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Professional services described
as Davis®, Davis Dyslexia Correction®, Davis Symbol Mastery®, Davis Orientation
Counselling®, Davis Math Mastery SM and Davis Learning Strategies® may
only be provided by persons who are
employed by a licensed Davis Specialist, or who are trained and licensed
as Davis Facilitators by
Davis Dyslexia Association International.
|
http://www.dyslexia-uk.org/AdultCharact.html