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37 Common Characteristics of Dyslexia, ©1992 by Ronald
D.Davis. Used with permission.
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| General |
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- Appears bright, highly intelligent, and articulate
but unable to read, write, or spell at grade level.
- Labelled
lazy, dumb, careless, immature, "not trying hard enough," or "behavior
problem."
- Isn't "behind enough" or "bad enough" to
be helped in the school setting.
- High in IQ, yet may not test well academically;
tests well orally, but not written.
- Feels dumb; has poor self-esteem;
hides or covers up weaknesses with ingenious compensatory strategies;
easily frustrated and emotional about school
reading
or testing.
- Talented in art, drama, music, sports, mechanics, story-telling,
sales, business, designing, building, or engineering.
- Seems
to "Zone
out" or daydream often; gets lost easily or
loses track of time.
- Difficulty
sustaining attention; seems "hyper" or "daydreamer."
- Learns
best through hands-on experience, demonstrations, experimentation,
observation, and visual aids.
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| Vision, Reading, and Spelling |
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- Complains of dizziness, headaches or stomach aches
while reading.
- Confused by letters, numbers, words, sequences, or verbal
explanations.
- Reading or writing shows repetitions, additions, transpositions,
omissions, substitutions, and reversals in letters, numbers and/or
words.
- Complains
of feeling or seeing non-existent movement while reading, writing,
or copying.
- Seems to have difficulty with vision, yet eye exams don't reveal
a problem.
- Extremely keen sighted and observant, or lacks depth perception
and
peripheral vision.
- Reads and rereads with little comprehension.
- Spells phonetically and
inconsistently.
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| Hearing and Speech |
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- Has extended hearing; hears things
not said or apparent to others; easily distracted by sounds.
- Difficulty
putting thoughts into words; speaks in halting phrases; leaves
sentences incomplete; stutters under stress; mispronounces long words,
or transposes phrases, words, and syllables when speaking.
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| Writing and Motor Skills |
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- Trouble with writing or copying; pencil grip is
unusual; handwriting varies or is illegible.
- Clumsy, uncoordinated, poor
at ball or team sports; difficulties with fine and/or gross motor
skills and tasks; prone to motion-sickness.
- Can be ambidextrous, and often confuses
left/right, over/under.
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| Math and Time Management |
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- Has difficulty telling time, managing time, learning
sequenced information or tasks, or being on time.
- Computing math shows
dependence on finger counting and other tricks; knows answers, but
can't do it on paper.
- Can count, but has difficulty counting objects and dealing
with money.
- Can do arithmetic, but fails word problems; cannot grasp
algebra or
higher math.
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| Memory and Cognition |
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- Excellent long-term memory for experiences, locations,
and faces.
- Poor memory for sequences, facts and information that has
not been experienced.
- Thinks primarily with images and feeling, not sounds
or words (little
internal dialogue).
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| Behaviour, Health, Development and Personality |
- Extremely disorderly or compulsively orderly.
- Can be class
clown, trouble-maker, or too quiet.
- Had unusually early or late developmental
stages (talking, crawling,
walking, tying shoes).
- Prone to ear infections; sensitive to foods, additives,
and chemical
products.
- Can be an extra deep or light sleeper; bedwetting beyond appropriate
age.
- Unusually high or low tolerance for pain.
- Strong sense of justice; emotionally
sensitive; strives for perfection.
- Mistakes and symptoms increase dramatically
with confusion, time pressure, emotional stress, or poor health.
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Professional services described as Davis®, Davis Dyslexia
Correction®, Davis Symbol Mastery®, Davis Orientation Counseling®,
Davis Math Mastery® and Davis Learning Strategies® may only be
provided by persons who are employed by a licensed Davis Specialist,
or who are trained and licensed as Davis Facilitators by Davis
Dyslexia Association International.
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