Dyslexia in children
goodtoknow says: Dyslexia is a learning difficulty where your child may struggle with reading, writing and spelling. Sometimes they can get numbers muddled too. Up to 10 per cent of people in the UK have dyslexia. It has nothing to do with intelligence and we don't really know what causes it, although it's thought that brain patterns differ in dyslexics. It can run in families and be mild or severe. There's no cure but there is a lot of help available to alleviate your child's problems. Start by speaking to your child's teacher.
For a full medical explanation of the causes, symptoms and treatments of dyslexia from patient.co.uk, read on.
Dyslexia means 'difficulty with words.' Some people have very mild dyslexia. For others, it can be a severe problem that makes learning to read, write and spell extremely difficult. There is no cure for dyslexia but it has nothing to do with intelligence and there are lots of ways to help minimise and treat it. The sooner your child is diagnosed the better.
Who gets it?
Experts believe that two or three children in an average class could have some form of dyslexia. There are around 375,000 children in the UK with dyslexia and around 2 million people in the UK are severely affected. It's now widely accepted that people are born with dyslexia and it's passed on through families. If one parent is dyslexic, there's a 50 per cent chance that any of their children will inherit it too. It has always been thought that dyslexia affects more boys than girls, but recent research suggests they are equally affected.
- Next: What are the symptoms of dyslexia?
More help and advice
- Is your child dyslexic? Tips on spotting it
- How to deal with teachers
- Help your child to well at school
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4 months
Veronica
Hi my daughter is 12 years old and I am worried that she may have this also. Is there such a thing as word dyslexia? As she always says the wrong words and gets tonge tied alot (when nervous she stutters). Also even though she knows how to spell words, when she does it in a hurry she always spells them wrong? She iis intelligent so I cant understand this. Mind you I went to speech therapy when I was young and have problems in saying right words when speaking and so does my mum have the say problem. Do you think this is a form of dyslexia or something else?
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