|
What Is Dyslexia?
When people hear the
term "dyslexia" many different things come to mind. Here are a
breakdown of different definitions.....
A simple
definition: Dyslexia is an inherited condition
that makes it extremely difficult to read, write, and spell in your
native language—despite at least average intelligence.
From the
International Dyslexia Association (revised): Dyslexia is a neurologically-based,
often familial, disorder which interferes with the acquisition and
processing of language. Varying in degrees of severity, it is
manifested by difficulties in receptive and expressive language,
including phonological processing, in reading, writing, spelling,
handwriting, and sometimes in arithmetic.
Dyslexia is not the result of lack of motivation, sensory impairment,
inadequate instructional or environmental opportunities, or other
limiting conditions, but may occur together with these conditions.
Although dyslexia is lifelong, individuals with
dyslexia frequently respond successfully to timely and appropriate
intervention.
What Causes Dyslexia?
Dyslexia is an inherited condition.
Researchers have determined that a gene on the short arm of chromosome
#6 is responsible for dyslexia. That gene is dominant, making dyslexia
highly heritable. It definitely runs in families.
Dyslexia results from a neurological difference; that
is, a brain difference. People with dyslexia have a larger
right-hemisphere in their brains than those of normal readers. That
may be one reason people with dyslexia often have significant
strengths in areas controlled by the right-side of the brain, such as
artistic, athletic, and mechanical gifts; 3-D visualization ability;
musical talent; creative problem solving skills; and intuitive people
skills.
In addition to unique brain architecture, people
with dyslexia have unusual "wiring". Neurons are found in unusual
places in the brain, and are not as neatly ordered as in non-dyslexic
brains.
In addition to unique brain architecture and
unusual wiring, f/MRI studies have shown that people with dyslexia do
not use the same part of their brain when reading as other people.
Regular readers consistently use the same part of their brain when
they read. People with dyslexia do not use that part of their brain,
and there appears to be no consistent part used among dyslexic
readers.
It is therefore assumed that people with dyslexia
are not using the most efficient part of their brain when they read. A
different part of their brain has taken over that function.
Back to top
What is a Learning Disability?
Learning Disability is not a specific
term; it is a category containing many specific disabilities, all of
which cause learning to be difficult. The following definition of
"learning disability" is used for legislative, financial, and
educational purposes only. It is NOT a definition of dyslexia, which
is one specific learning disability.
The term
'learning disability' means a disorder in one or more of the basic
processes involved in understanding spoken or written language. It may
show up as a problem in listening, thinking, speaking, reading,
writing, or spelling or in a person's ability to do math, despite at
least average intelligence.
The term does not include children who have
learning problems which are primarily the result of visual, hearing,
or physical handicaps, or mental retardation, or emotional
disturbance, or of environmental, cultural, or economic disadvantage.
Back to top
What is Phonemic Awareness?
National Institute of Health research has repeatedly demonstrated that lack
of phonemic awareness is the root cause of reading failure.
Phonemes are the smallest unit of SPOKEN language, not
written language.
Children who lack phonemic awareness are unable to
distinguish or manipulate SOUNDS within SPOKEN words or syllables.
They would be unable to do the following tasks:
- Phoneme Segmentation:
what sounds do you hear in the word hot? What's the last
sound in the word map?
- Phoneme Deletion:
what word would be left if the /k/ sound were taken away from cat?
- Phoneme Matching:
do pen and pipe start with the same sound?
- Phoneme Counting:
how many sounds do you hear in the word cake?
- Phoneme Substitution:
what word would you have if you changed the /h/ in hot to
/p/?
- Blending: what
word would you have if you put these sounds together? /s/ /a/ /t/
- Rhyming: tell me
as many words as you can that rhyme with the word eat.
If a child lacks phonemic awareness, they will have
difficulty learning the relationship between letters and the sounds
they represent in words, as well as applying those letter/sound
correspondences to help them "sound out" unknown words.
So children who perform poorly on phonemic
awareness tasks via oral language in kindergarten are very likely to
experience difficulties acquiring the early word reading skills that
provide the foundation for growth of reading ability throughout
elementary school.
Phonemic awareness skills can and must be directly
and explicitly taught to children who lack this awareness.
Phonemic awareness must exist or be explicitly and directly taught BEFORE
phonics instruction begins. Otherwise, the phonics instruction will
not make sense to the dyslexic child.
Phonological processing refers to
understanding of sounds used in our language, ranging
from big chunks of sound (words), to smaller chunks (syllables) and
eventually to phonemic awareness (every sound within a syllable). Both
phonemic awareness and phonological processing are auditory processing
skills. Therefore, they can (and should) be taught before
letters are introduced.
The goal of teaching phonics is to link the
individual sounds to letters, and to make that process fluent and
automatic, for both reading and spelling. In other words, phonics
teaches students symbol-to-sound and sound-to-symbol.
But for phonics to work, a student must first have
solid phonological processing and phonemic awareness.
Back to top
|