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Most dyslexics will exhibit about 10 of the following traits and behaviors. These characteristics can
vary from day-to-day or minute-to-minute. The most consistent thing about dyslexics is their inconsistency.
- General
- Vision, Reading, and Spelling
- Hearing and Speech
- Writing and Motor Skills
- Math and Time Management
- Memory and Cognition
- Behavior, Health, Development and Personality
© 1992 by Ronald D. Davis - used with permission
- Appears bright, highly intelligent, and articulate but unable to read, write, or spell at grade level.
- Labeled 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.
- 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).
- 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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If you or your child displays any of these common symptoms and you would like to confirm if it could
be Dyslexia, click the link below:
Dyslexia On-Line Assessment
If you would like more information or are interested in pursuing the program and would
like to set up an initial consultation, contact:
Melissa Slominski
Licensed Davis® Dyslexia Correction Facilitator
Three Rivers Learning Center
7150 SW Hampton Street, Suite 201
Tigard, Oregon 97223
Phone: 503-957-2998
email: melissa@dyslexiaoregon.com


Pictured above: Davis Dyslexia Correction Program Founder, Ronald D. Davis, with Three Rivers Learning Center's Melissa Slominski at a recent lecture entitled, The Answer to Dyslexia.
Davis Dyslexia Association International in an internationally recognized program that was initially developed by Ronald D. Davis to correct his own dyslexia. As founder of the Reading Research Council in California, Ron Davis spent more than 13 years researching dyslexia before creating what is now known as Davis Dyslexia Association International. Since 1995, the Davis Dyslexia Correction Program has grown to be the most widely used dyslexia correction program in the world. It is offered in approximately 40 different nations and 30 languages. Over 450 licensed Facilitators worldwide provide approximately 18,000 correction programs per year with a 97% success rate.
For articles on the most recent dyslexia and brain research, and research support for Davis Dyslexia Methods visit: Dyslexia Research Information.
 The Dyslexic Reader The Dyslexic Reader magazine is packed with information, resources, and inspirational stories and has been enjoyed by thousands of subscribers over the years. Back-issues and current issues are now available on-line in an easy downloadable format!
View The Dyslexic Reader on-line here!
Interesting External Links
The Anatomy of Learning Disability (Article)
The Learning People - an overview of the Davis program (YouTube video)
The Power of Dyslexia (YouTube video)
Read the Words.com (a free, high-quality, on-line text reader)
Learning CAN be easy...Three Rivers Learning Center can HELP! |