Dyslexia Test
Thursday, September 17th, 2009    Subscribe To Our FeedThere are at least 40 million Americans with dyslexia signs. “Unfortunately a lot of kids with dyslexia, possibly as many as a third, are missed, misdiagnosed or not diagnosed at all,” says Yale scientist Jeffrey R. Gruen M.D. “Now you’ve got a kid who hits fourth or fifth grade and they’re struggling; their self-esteem begins to diminish, and it almost becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. If you can identify these kids early, by third grade, and get them into an intervention program, you can frequently get them reading up to grade-level, and that effect is long-lasting. That’s a wonderful thing.” Many people make it into adulthood without ever taking a dyslexia test or receiving a diagnosis, even though they have an adult learning disability. Soon, scientists say, they will have an early genetic screening test in place to help people understand their condition as soon as possible.
Some of the current tests for dyslexia include the Beery Developmental Test of Visual-Motor Integration, Bender Gestalt Test of Visual Motor Perception, Expressive One-Word Picture Vocabulary Test, Kaufman Assessment Battery for Children (KABC), Kaufman Tests of Educational Achievement (KTEA), Motor-Free Visual Perception Test, Peabody Individual Achievement Tests (PIAT), Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test, Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale, Test for Auditory Comprehension of Language (TACL), Test of Auditory Perception (TAPS), Test of Visual Perception (TVPS), Visual Aural Digit Span Test (VADS), Wechsler Individual Achievement Tests (WIAT, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Third Edition (WISC-III) and the Woodcock-Johnson Psycho-Educational Battery test. To gather the full picture, doctors and psychologists usually try as many of these tests as they can to assess adult learning disabilities. This is called a “multi-approach” to diagnosis. In addition to these psychoanalytical tests, medical doctors can now perform brain scans using MRI and PET imaging to detect brain anomalies.
Sometimes an adult dyslexia test may reveal other adult learning disabilities. Nonverbal learning disabilities are classified under a different neurological disorder, which shows problems with organization, evaluating and visual-spatial processing. With an auditory or visual processing disorder, a person may see or hear perfectly fine but have a difficult time deciphering. Dysgraphia is a writing disability where a person may be unable to write in cursive, form certain letters or include proper spacing. With dyscalculia, a person may be unable to solve the simplest mathematical problems or understand the most basic math concepts. ADHD anxiety may make a person feel distracted, excitable and unable to concentrate long enough to understand or store information properly.
A dyslexia test is the first step toward improving one’s life. Once the diagnosis has been made, a person can learn more about his or her particular learning style. The worst fallacy perpetuated by schooling is that there are “smart kids” and “stupid kids,” who later grow into “smart adults” and “stupid adults.” In reality, we learn that our brains are simply different. We can’t all learn by one standardized method. Yes, some people can remember something simply by listening to it once or reading it once; but other people may need more reinforcement — they read it, they hear it, they write it, they discuss it and then they remember it. Reading difficulties can really inhibit a person’s life, since there are so many times we must read — whether it is in a restaurant, on the job or at home. Yet as people understand more about their personal learning styles, they can begin to realize their full potential.
Beth Kaminski is a leading expert in how to end panic attacks and has been publishing lots of information on the anxiety disorder medication for years now.
Technorati Tags: No Tags
Related Tags: No Tags
Possible Related Posts
Dyslexia ScreeningAdult DyslexiaAdult Learning Center























