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Signs and Symptoms of Dyslexia

Before school/Pre-school:

  • Delayed speech and/or speech articulation problems
  • Mixing up the sounds and syllables in multisyllabic words (aminal for animal, bisghetti for spaghetti)
  • Late establishing a dominant hand
  • Trouble remembering letter names and sounds
  • Trouble learning to count
  • Trouble with rhyming words
  • A history of reading problems in parents or siblings
  • Reading errors that show no connection to the sounds of the letters on the page—will say “puppy” instead of the written word “dog” on an illustrated page with a picture of a dog

Elementary school:

  • Slow, choppy, inaccurate reading
  • Skips or misreads prepositions (at, to, of)
  • Ignores suffixes (word endings)
  • Trouble memorizing a sequence of steps
  • Trouble reading unfamiliar words, often making wild guesses because they cannot sound out the word
  • Avoids reading out loud
  • Poor spelling

Young adult/adult:

  • Limited vocabulary
  • Very poor written expression
  • Large difference between verbal skills and written work
  • Poor grades in classes
  • Slow reader
  • May have to read a page two or three times to understand it
  • Dreads writing memos, letters, emails, etc.
  • A childhood history of reading and spelling difficulties
  • While reading skills have developed over time, reading still requires great effort and is done at a slow pace
  • Difficulty remembering names of people and places; confuses names that sound alike
  • Spoken vocabulary is smaller than listening vocabulary
  • Avoids saying words that might be mispronounced