Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Identifying students with dyslexia: exploration of current assessment methods
View through CrossRef
AbstractEarly identification plays a crucial role in providing timely support to students with learning disabilities, such as dyslexia, in order to overcome their reading difficulties. However, there is significant variability in the methods used for identifying dyslexia. This study aimed to explore and understand the practices of dyslexia identification in the UK. A survey was conducted among 274 dyslexia professionals, including educational psychologists and dyslexia specialists, to investigate the types of assessments they employ, their approach to utilizing assessment data, their decision-making processes, and their conceptualization of dyslexia. Additionally, the study examined whether these professionals held any misconceptions or myths associated with dyslexia. Analysis of the survey data revealed substantial variability in how professionals conceptualize dyslexia, as well as variations in assessment methods. Furthermore, a significant proportion of the survey respondents subscribed to one or more misconceptions regarding dyslexia; the most common misconception identified among professionals was the belief that children with dyslexia read letters in reverse order. The findings highlight the need for standardized approaches to dyslexia identification and debunking prevailing misconceptions. The implications of these findings are discussed, emphasizing the importance of informed policy and practice in supporting students with dyslexia. Recommendations are provided to enhance consistency and accuracy in dyslexia identification, with the aim of facilitating early intervention and support for affected students.
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Title: Identifying students with dyslexia: exploration of current assessment methods
Description:
AbstractEarly identification plays a crucial role in providing timely support to students with learning disabilities, such as dyslexia, in order to overcome their reading difficulties.
However, there is significant variability in the methods used for identifying dyslexia.
This study aimed to explore and understand the practices of dyslexia identification in the UK.
A survey was conducted among 274 dyslexia professionals, including educational psychologists and dyslexia specialists, to investigate the types of assessments they employ, their approach to utilizing assessment data, their decision-making processes, and their conceptualization of dyslexia.
Additionally, the study examined whether these professionals held any misconceptions or myths associated with dyslexia.
Analysis of the survey data revealed substantial variability in how professionals conceptualize dyslexia, as well as variations in assessment methods.
Furthermore, a significant proportion of the survey respondents subscribed to one or more misconceptions regarding dyslexia; the most common misconception identified among professionals was the belief that children with dyslexia read letters in reverse order.
The findings highlight the need for standardized approaches to dyslexia identification and debunking prevailing misconceptions.
The implications of these findings are discussed, emphasizing the importance of informed policy and practice in supporting students with dyslexia.
Recommendations are provided to enhance consistency and accuracy in dyslexia identification, with the aim of facilitating early intervention and support for affected students.
Related Results
A scoping review of interventions used with individuals with dyslexia to improve their writing performance
A scoping review of interventions used with individuals with dyslexia to improve their writing performance
Developmental dyslexia is the common term for the neurobiological disorder known as “Specific Learning Disorder in Reading” in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 5. It is believ...
Phonological Change Error Patterns according to Type of Tasks (Reading, Writing) of Students with Dyslexia
Phonological Change Error Patterns according to Type of Tasks (Reading, Writing) of Students with Dyslexia
Objectives: This study compared 3rd and 4th grade students with dyslexia with typically developing children who were matched according to decoding ability, confirmed the characteri...
Dyslexia, Learning, and the Brain
Dyslexia, Learning, and the Brain
A unique overview of research on dyslexia and an account of the underlying causes at cognitive, brain, and neural system levels that provides a framework for significant progress i...
Dyslexia in medicine
Dyslexia in medicine
On a recent ENT placement, I was taking ahistory from a patient on the ward duringwhich the patient asked me If I would be ableto explain their diagnosis further to them.During the...
The Problem of Dyslexia among East African Children: Calvin’s Creatio Imago Dei Imago Christ for Invitational-Inclusive Education, Faith and Life
The Problem of Dyslexia among East African Children: Calvin’s Creatio Imago Dei Imago Christ for Invitational-Inclusive Education, Faith and Life
The spirituality of children can be explained by their being and existential limits. Childhooditself is an open divine mystery. At the center of their spirituality, is their Creati...
The THE DEVELOPMENT AND VALIDATION OF THE FORMAN DYSLEXIA SCREENING CHECKLIST: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT TOOL FOR EARLY IDENTIFICATION OF DYSLEXIA IN PAKISTANI STUDENTS
The THE DEVELOPMENT AND VALIDATION OF THE FORMAN DYSLEXIA SCREENING CHECKLIST: A CULTURALLY RELEVANT TOOL FOR EARLY IDENTIFICATION OF DYSLEXIA IN PAKISTANI STUDENTS
Dyslexia, a Neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by difficulties in reading, spelling, and word recognition, poses significant educational challenges globally. This study invo...
SELF-IMAGE AND SELF-ESTEEM IN CHILDREN WITH DYSLEXIA
SELF-IMAGE AND SELF-ESTEEM IN CHILDREN WITH DYSLEXIA
Children with dyslexia often face challenges beyond academic performance, which can lead to negative self-perceptions and reduced self-esteem. The association between self-image an...
Facial speech processing in children with and without dyslexia
Facial speech processing in children with and without dyslexia
Abstract
What role does the presence of facial speech play for children with dyslexia? Current literature proposes two distinctive claims. On...

