A learning disorder is present when the brain takes in and works with information in a way that is not typical. It keeps a person from learning a skill and using it well. People with learning disorders by and large have average or above-average intelligence. So, there's a gap between their expected skills, based on age and intelligence, and how they do in school.
Common learning disorders affect a child's ability to:
- Read.
- Write.
- Do math.
- Use or understand language.
- Socialize.
- Learn other skills that don't involve words.
Reading
Reading is based on understanding speech. Learning disorders with reading often are based on a child's trouble understanding a spoken word as a mix of distinct sounds. This can make it hard to understand how a letter or letters represent a sound and how letters make a word.
Problems with short-term memory, also called working memory, can play a role.
Even when basic reading skills are mastered, children may have trouble with the following skills:
- Reading at a typical pace.
- Understanding what they read.
- Recalling correctly what they read.
- Making conclusions based on their reading.
- Spelling.
One of the most common types of learning disorders is a reading disorder called dyslexia. It causes you to have trouble picking out different speech sounds in words and learning how letters relate to those sounds.
Writing
Writing requires complex skills that involve vision, movement and the ability to process information. A learning disorder in writing, also called dysgraphia, may cause the following:
- Slow handwriting that takes a lot of work.
- Trouble recalling how to form letters, copy shapes and draw lines.
- Handwriting that's hard to read.
- Trouble putting thoughts into writing.
- Written text that's poorly organized or hard to understand.
- Trouble with spelling, grammar and punctuation.
Math
A learning disorder in math, also called dyscalculia, may cause problems with the following skills:
- Understanding how numbers work and relate to each other.
- Doing math problems.
- Learning basic math rules.
- Using math symbols.
- Understanding word problems.
- Organizing and recording information while solving a math problem.
Speech and Language
Children with speech and language disorders can have trouble using and understanding spoken or written words. They may have trouble:
- Reading and writing.
- Doing math word problems.
- Following directions.
- Answering questions.
A variety of speech and language disorders can affect kids. A few examples are:
- Stuttering — trouble saying words or sentences in a way that flows smoothly.
- Articulation errors — difficulty forming certain words or sounds.
- Childhood apraxia — trouble accurately moving the lips, jaw and tongue to speak.
Children with speech or language disorders often can understand and work well with visual information. They also can use visual cues well in social situations.
Nonverbal skills
Children with nonverbal learning disorders often have good basic language skills. They can excel at memorizing words too. But these children may have trouble with some skills that don't involve speaking, such as:
- Perceiving where objects are.
- Understanding abstract concepts.
- Reading people's emotions through facial expressions and other cues.
- Moving the body, also called physical coordination. This type of trouble is known as dyspraxia.
- Fine motor skills, such as writing. This issue may happen along with other learning disorders.
- Paying attention, planning and organizing, as seen in attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorders (ADHD).
- Understanding higher-level reading or writing tasks, often appearing in later grade school.