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Primary education

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9yo DS with reading difficulties

55 replies

Sunburnt · 18/06/2012 21:53

9yo DS is in Y4 and has always struggled with his reading and has never enjoyed it (despite loving stories and being read to). In Y1 he needed some additional support in class (as part of a small group) to work on phonics and general understanding and, although he has obviously improved since then, he still finds reading difficult. Now in Y4, he regularly skips lines and small words when reading, eg it, an, of, as, etc. He also struggles to read longer words if he doesn?t recognise them immediately and will make no attempt to break the word down into chunks. He just makes up a word that begins with the same letter (even if it isn?t a real word). He has been to see a behavioural optometrist who prescribed glasses for close work but nothing else out of the ordinary was noted.

Tonight, he was reading and was skipping words again, reading in a very halting way and clearly struggling. I asked him what the words looked like on the page and he told me that they were fuzzy. This was with his glasses on and the book VERY close to his face. I put the book on his knee, pointed to a word, and asked him to read it to me. He couldn?t. I asked him to tell me what he thought the letters were and he got quite a few of the letters wrong. I then asked him if the words were doing anything and he told me that the words in italic (a few lines on the page) were jumping about a bit. I also asked him why he skipped the small words and he said it was because he didn?t see them.

Over the years, we have had concerns about his general literacy levels. He is in the bottom group at school and struggles to complete tasks in class, his spelling is poor and he finds it difficult to structure his writing (punctuation, order of sentences, etc). However, in CAT tests over the past two years he has scored well above average in all three tests. We have tried to raise our concerns with teachers but are always told that he is doing OK and there is no need to worry, he just needs to work on xyz. At the last parent evening, his teacher asked if we had noticed that he struggles with two-step instructions. When I asked her if we should be concerned about it, she said no.

I?m not so sure. My gut feeling is that it is part of a wider problem. DS struggles to stay on task and focussed with lots of things, whether it?s getting dressed for school, at swimming lessons or doing homework. He lacks confidence and thinks he is stupid, it?s heart-breaking to hear him say this and he is such a lovely, caring and bright boy. I feel we are letting him down and should be pushing more to really get to the bottom of whatever the problem is. I just don?t know where to start or who to push, the school just bat away our concerns.

Sorry again for the long post, thanks for getting to the end. Any advice would really be appreciated.

OP posts:
IndigoBell · 29/06/2012 14:05

Not in my opinion.

But there are different schools of thought on how best to treat these problems - and coloured overlays / glasses is certainly one school of thought.

IndigoBell · 29/06/2012 14:08

Dyslexia, Really? explains a lot more about reading problems and vision.

mollymole · 29/06/2012 14:21

I see that he has been to a behavoural optomestrist BUT has he had a color overlay test. I work part time in an opticians and our lady optometrist has a special interest in how colour can help/dyslexia etc and, along side of local schools and colleges, the practice has had a lot of success with prescribing colour overlay/spx etc, even where there is no need for an optical correction.

If you ring a company called 'Cerium' on 01580 765211 and ask them to send you a leaflet called 'See how colour can help your child read clearer', this may well answer some of your questions and lead you in the right direction.

Visual stress (Meares-Irlen Syndrome) some of the signs & symptons are;

Moving closer or further away from the book
Moving book around on desk
Fidgeting
using finger as marker
Skipping word or lines
Re-reading the same line
Saying that the
print moves around
letters change shape or size
Patterns running through the prinnt
Sore eyes
Headaches and visual discomfort.

Dyslexia is a term used to refer toreading problems that are not caused by poor teaching and is often associated with reading/spelling difficulty.
Visual Stree is NOT the same as dyslexia BUT it is more common in those who are dyslexic.

Hope this helps !!

Sunburnt · 29/06/2012 16:51

Thanks for the info and links, I'll have a look at those. I must admit I was expecting more to come out of the session.

OP posts:
Sunburnt · 29/06/2012 17:14

Sorry mollymole, missed your question about colour overlay test. Yes, he did have this test. He was there for about an hour or so and apparently did several different tests, including this. I wasn't there so not sure of the specifics of the other tests.

I've also spoken with his teacher at school now who agrees with me that there is a problem and has said she will discuss it with the HT. So, I'll see what comes of that.

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