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What Is Dyslexia? (Dyslexia Series, Part 1)

Few things create so much tension within a parent as a child who struggles with reading, spelling, and writing. Most children find it easy or relatively easy, but for one out of five children, this experience is very different. For them, learning to read is so complex that the word “dyslexia” is often used to refer to this severe struggle.

The term dyslexia was coined from the Greek words dys and lexis, meaning “poor with language.” The term refers to persons for whom reading is simply beyond their reach. Spelling and writing are usually included due to their close relationship to reading.

These children, who understand the spoken word and love to listen to stories, struggle to decipher the same words when written on a page. They read slowly and haltingly, and words they read correctly in one sentence may be misread in a subsequent sentence. Reading aloud may be particularly painful. Eventually, they grow frustrated and disappointed.

The ability to read is indispensable for academic success. Teachers, witnessing the widening gap between good and poor readers, may wonder what they or these children might be doing wrong. Knowing that reading problems have consequences across development into adult life, parents question themselves, feeling alternately guilty and angry.

What exactly is dyslexia?

According to popular belief, dyslexia is a neurological disorder in the brain that causes information to be processed and interpreted differently, resulting in reading, spelling, and writing difficulties. Historically, the dyslexia label was assigned to students who are bright, even verbally articulate, but who struggle with reading; in short, whose high IQs mismatch their low reading scores. When children are not as bright, their reading troubles were ascribed to their general intellectual limitations.

Then there are also specific symptoms and signs:
  • Reverses letters like and d, or p and q, or reads words like no for on, rat for tar, won for now, saw for was.
  • Puts letters in the wrong order, reading felt as left, act as cat, reserve as reverse, expect as except.
  • Misreads little words, such as a for and, the for a, from for for, then for there, were for with.
  • Loses orientation on a line or page while reading, missing lines or reading previously-read lines again.
  • Reads aloud hesitantly, word by word, monotonously.
  • Tries to sound the letters of the word, but is then unable to say the correct word. For example, sounds the letters ‘c-a-t’ but then says cold.
  • Mispronounces words or puts stress on the wrong syllables.
  • Foreshortens words, for example, ‘portion’ for proportion.
  • Omits prefixes, omits suffixes, or adds suffixes.
  • Reads with poor comprehension.
  • Remembers little of what was read.
  • Cannot match the appropriate letter when given the sound.
  • Often ignores punctuation, omitting full stops or commas.

The extreme viewpoints about dyslexia are what make it so difficult for parents to know how to help their child best.

On the one side, there is the group that believes dyslexia is a condition that cannot be cured but endured, and on the other extreme, there are those who say diagnoses of dyslexia are a complete waste of time.

The British Dyslexia Association (BDA) states that dyslexia “is likely to be present at birth and to be life-long in its effects.” The association and many others like it recommend taking a dyslexia test – at a cost – and provide advice about how to cope with dyslexia and gain access to the special study allowances and benefits available for diagnosed dyslexics.

According to some authors, there is no hope for those suffering from dyslexia, and the gap between those who read well and children with dyslexia is fast getting wider. Scholars call this the “Matthew effect,” referring to Matthew 25:29, which tells us of the rich becoming richer and the poor poorer. According to this viewpoint, the dyslexic’s “reading and other learning problems are likely to continue into adulthood with destructive effects on their feelings of self-worth, personal relationships, and job opportunities and performance.”

To create awareness for dyslexia – and probably also to shed some light on the dismal belief that this is an incurable condition – support groups started to proclaim the idea that many famous people, among others Albert Einstein, had dyslexia. This story has been told so many times that it is regarded as a fact today, despite literature to the contrary.

It is often said that Einstein only started talking at the age of four, which is then described as a “sign” that he had dyslexia. According to Einstein’s biographers, this is simply not true. Einstein was introduced to his newborn sister when he was two-and-a-half years old. Expecting a toy, he asked, rather disappointedly, “Where are the wheels?” 

Einstein entered school at the age of six and, against popular belief, did very well. When he was seven, his mother wrote, “Yesterday Albert received his grades, he was again number one, his report card was brilliant.” By the time he was nine-and-a-half, Einstein was accepted at the prestigious and highly competitive Luitpold Gymnasium, which indicates his academic performance was above average.

At the age of twelve, Einstein read physics books. At 13, after reading Critique of Pure Reason and the works of other philosophers, Einstein adopted Kant as his favorite author. At that time, he also read Darwin.

Dyslexic diagnoses add little value

Professor Julian Elliott, from Durham University in the United Kingdom, and Professor Elena Grigorenko, from Yale University in the United States of America, see dyslexia from a very different perspective – that diagnosing dyslexia adds little value. In their book, The Dyslexia Debate, they write: “Parents are being misled by claims that such dyslexia assessments are scientifically rigorous, and that a diagnosis will point to more effective forms of treatment.”

Elliott raises concerns about the ever-increasing number of people who are diagnosed as dyslexic. Dyslexia, according to Elliot, is a term that “confuses, rather than clarifies, and should be discontinued.”

New research, new hope

The view that dyslexia is incurable is the result of an old belief that the brain cannot change, let alone improve. People were told that when there was something wrong with a person’s brain, it could not be fixed. Scientists firmly believed that each person was born with a certain number of brain cells, and if any of them were injured, there was no way to reverse the damage. Problems like dyslexia, linked to the brain, were therefore regarded as beyond cure.

Today, we know better

Technological advances, such as fMRI scans, have enabled scientists to see that the brain is plastic; the brain can change and improve, which is good news for your child. According to the latest research, every child can be helped.

In Part 2, we will explore our fantastic, plastic brain and how neuroplasticity is the light at the end of the dark dyslexia tunnel.


Edublox offers cognitive training and live online tutoring to students with dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyscalculia, and other learning disabilities. Our students are in the United States, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere. Book a free consultation to discuss your child’s learning needs.


Authored by Sue du Plessis (B.A. Hons Psychology; B.D.), an educational and reading specialist with 30+ years of experience in the learning disabilities field.



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Contact your local NA branch to assist your child with reading, spelling, maths and learning.

Edublox International welcomes you.

Contact your local SA branch to assist your child with reading, spelling, maths and learning.