Hints and Tips
for Secondary School Teachers (BDA)
We have all come across the situation, a young person struggling with aspects of reading, writing, spelling and perhaps numeracy. The learner who is struggling, despite clear ability in specific aspects of the curriculum. For some there may be slight improvement in time, but for many there will not.
Your experience tells you that there is something different about this learner, that he/she needs specific support for learning in order to meet obvious potential. Normal provision is not helping.
So, what is their problem? Who can help? How do you know whether or not a particular adolescent may be dyslexic? What should you look for?
Dyslexia is a combination of abilities as well as difficulties. It is the disparity between them that is often the give-away clue. The person who, despite certain areas of difficulty, may still be creative, artistic, sporting or orally very able and knowledgeable.
However, alongside these abilities, will be a cluster of difficulties - individual for each person.
Written work
Has a poor standard of written work compared with oral ability
Has poor handwriting with badly formed letters
Has neat handwriting, but writes very slowly indeed
Produces badly set out or messily written work, with spellings crossed out several times
Spells the same word differently in one piece of work
Has difficulty with punctuation and/or grammar
Confuses upper and lower case letters
Writes a great deal but 'loses the thread'
Writes very little, but to the point
Has difficulty taking notes in lectures
Difficulty with organisation of homework
Finds tasks difficult to complete on time
Appears to know more than can be committed to paper
Reading
Is hesitant and laboured, especially when reading aloud
Omits, repeats or adds extra words
Reads at a reasonable rate, but has a low level of comprehension
Fails to recognise familiar words
Misses a line or repeats the same line twice
Loses his place - or uses a finger or marker to keep the place
Has difficulty in pin-pointing the main idea in a passage
Finds difficulty with dictionaries, directories, encyclopaedias
Numeracy
Finds difficulty remembering tables and/or basic number sets
Finds sequencing problematic
Confuses signs such as x for +
Can think at a high level in mathematics, but needs a calculator for simple calculations
Misreads questions that include words
Finds mental arithmetic at speed very difficult
Finds memorising formulae difficult
Other areas
Confuses direction - left/right
Has difficulty in learning foreign languages
Has indeterminate hand preference
Has difficulty in finding the name for an object
Has clear processing problems at speed
Misunderstands complicated questions
Finds holding a list of instructions in memory difficult, although can perform all tasks when told individually
Behaviour
Is disorganised or forgetful e.g. over sports equipment, lessons, homework, appointments
Is immature and/or clumsy
Has difficulty relating to others: is unable to 'read' body language
Is often in the wrong place at the wrong time
Is excessively tired, due to the amount of concentration and effort required
If you see a cluster of difficulties together with abilities in specific areas, the young person may be dyslexic.
Your next step should be to consult the school Special Needs Co-ordinator (SENCo) immediately and be given appropriate and immediate support.
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