Learning Difficulties: Dyslexia, Dyscalculia, Dysgraphia
Specific Learning Disabilities (SLDs) are the most frequently tested item in this chapter, and the single most important fact is that they are NOT a sign of low intelligence. A child with an SLD has average or above-average intelligence but a specific difficulty in one area of learning, caused by differences in how the brain processes information. Get the three apart precisely. Dyslexia is a difficulty with READING, the child struggles to decode words, may reverse letters such as b and d, reads slowly, and spells poorly, despite normal vision and intelligence. Dyscalculia is a difficulty with MATHEMATICS, the child confuses number symbols, struggles to count, line up digits, or grasp arithmetic operations. Dysgraphia is a difficulty with WRITING, mainly the physical act, the child has poor and laboured handwriting, inconsistent letter sizing and spacing, and finds writing tiring. (A memory hook: lexia sounds like lexicon and words, so reading; calc is calculation, so maths; graph is to write, so writing.) Signs appear as a gap between the child's clear ability in discussion and their poor performance in the affected skill. The inclusive response is remedial support, not punishment: extra time, oral tests, audiobooks or readers for dyslexia, concrete manipulatives and number lines for dyscalculia, allowing typing or a scribe and not penalising messy handwriting for dysgraphia. The RPwD Act 2016 recognises specific learning disabilities as a disability.
✅ Solved examples
✏️ Practice — try these, take hints as needed
📝 Topic test — 8 questions
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Key Concepts — Quick Reference
Four ways of placing children with special needs
| Segregation | Children with disabilities taught SEPARATELY in special schools |
|---|---|
| Integration / Mainstreaming | Child placed in regular school but must ADJUST to fit it |
| Inclusion | Regular school ADAPTS itself to fit every child; all learn together |
| RPwD Act 2016 | 21 disabilities; right to free education ages 6-18; reasonable accommodation |
Specific Learning Disabilities (NOT low intelligence)
| Dyslexia | Difficulty with READING (decoding words, spelling) |
|---|---|
| Dyscalculia | Difficulty with MATHS (numbers, calculation) |
| Dysgraphia | Difficulty with WRITING (handwriting, letter formation) |
| Key fact | SLDs occur in children of average or above-average intelligence |