Friday, 6 February 2026

Teaching learners with Dyscalculia

 Writing


Easy Read — Long Multiplication Difficulties in Dyscalculia
For Teachers, Tutors, Lecturers & Support Staff


Understanding the Difficulty

Some learners with Dyscalculia are confident with times tables.

They may know:

2 × 6
5 × 4
7 × 3

But when maths becomes long multiplication, the difficulty increases.

This is because long multiplication requires:

• Memory
• Sequencing
• Layout awareness
• Place value understanding
• Multiple steps at once


Learner Lived Experience Example

A learner may say:

“I’m okay with times tables, but long multiplication crosses over in my head.”

They often understand the first step (units column).

For example:

  23
×  4

They can do:

4 × 3 = 12 ✔️
Write 2, carry 1 ✔️

But when moving to the left side:

4 × 2 = ?

Their memory may freeze or jumble because they are thinking:

• Did I carry the 1?
• Which number do I multiply next?
• Do I add first or multiply first?

This creates confusion and anxiety.


Crossing Over Difficulty

When multiplication has more than one row, the confusion increases.

Example:

  23
× 14

Learners may struggle with:

• Which row to start next
• Where to put the zero
• When to add the rows
• Remembering the carried numbers

They may say:

“I don’t know which one I work on next or last.”

This is a sequencing and working memory difficulty — not lack of effort.


Why This Happens

Long multiplication uses many brain skills at once:

• Holding numbers in short-term memory
• Switching between steps
• Tracking columns
• Remembering carries
• Understanding place value

For Dyscalculic learners, this overloads processing capacity.


Support Strategies for Teachers

1️⃣ Use Grid / Box Method

Break numbers into boxes:

20 | 3
10 | 4

Multiply each box separately.

This removes the “cross over” confusion.


2️⃣ Colour Code Columns

Use colours for:

• Units
• Tens
• Hundreds

This helps learners track where they are working.


3️⃣ Cover Unused Columns

Let learners cover parts not in use yet.

This reduces visual overload.


4️⃣ Step Cards

Provide a step list:

  1. Multiply units

  2. Carry number

  3. Multiply tens

  4. Add carry

  5. Move to next row

Learners can tick steps off.


5️⃣ Allow Times Table Aids

Knowing tables is not the issue — memory load is.

Aids reduce pressure.


6️⃣ Use Calculators for Checking

Encourage:

• Attempt first
• Check after
• Review mistakes calmly


Emotional Support

Learners may feel:

• Embarrassed
• Frustrated
• Mentally “stuck”
• Slow compared to peers

Reassure them:

This is a processing difference, not intelligence.


Key Message

A learner can understand multiplication…

…but still struggle with long multiplication layout and sequencing.

Support should focus on:

• Visual structure
• Step reduction
• Memory aids
• Confidence building

Easy Read — Division & Fractions Difficulties in Dyscalculia
For Teachers, Tutors, Lecturers & Support Staff


The “Mind Barrier” Experience

Some learners with Dyscalculia describe maths as feeling like hitting a mental wall.

They may say:

“It’s like a mind barrier.”

This usually happens when maths involves:

• Too many steps
• Holding numbers in memory
• Abstract concepts
• Crossing columns
• Sequencing processes

The brain becomes overloaded and shuts down processing.


Division Difficulties

Many learners manage simple (single) division.

For example:

10 ÷ 2
12 ÷ 3
20 ÷ 5

They may use:

• Times tables knowledge
• Fingers
• Repeated subtraction
• Visual grouping

This is often manageable.


Long Division

Long division is where the barrier increases.

It requires learners to:

• Divide
• Multiply
• Subtract
• Bring numbers down
• Repeat steps

All in the correct order.

This is a heavy working-memory task.

Learners may need:

• One-to-one support
• Step charts
• Visual guides
• Calculator checking

Many avoid long division entirely without support — and that is common.


Fractions

Fractions can be another barrier area.

Some learners manage basic fractions, such as:

½
¼
¾

Especially when shown visually (pizza, cake, shapes).

But difficulties arise with:

• Equivalent fractions
• Adding fractions
• Improper fractions
• Converting to decimals
• Fraction division/multiplication

This is because fractions are abstract — they represent parts, not whole numbers.


Why These Areas Are Hard

Division and fractions require:

• Strong number sense
• Place value understanding
• Sequencing
• Working memory
• Visualisation

Dyscalculia affects many of these skills.


Support Strategies

1️⃣ Use Visual Models

Use:

• Pizza diagrams
• Fraction bars
• Counters
• Grouping objects

Seeing parts helps understanding.


2️⃣ Teach Step-by-Step

For division, use a repeat phrase:

Divide → Multiply → Subtract → Bring down

Keep it visible on the desk.


3️⃣ Allow Avoidance of Long Methods (When Appropriate)

In real life:

• Calculators are used
• Apps calculate bills
• Technology supports maths

Functional maths matters more than complex written methods.


4️⃣ Build Real-Life Links

Teach using:

• Money
• Shopping
• Cooking
• Measurements

Concrete examples reduce the “mind barrier.”


Emotional Impact

Learners may feel:

• Anxious
• Embarrassed
• Overwhelmed
• Mentally blocked

Staff should reassure learners that:

This is a recognised learning difficulty — not a personal failure.


Key Message

A learner may manage:

• Basic division
• Simple fractions

…but still need significant support with:

• Long division
• Fraction calculations

This uneven skill profile is typical in Dyscalculia.

riting

Easy Read — Understanding Quarters Using Shapes
Step-by-Step Support for Learners with Dyscalculia


Step 1 — Start With The Whole

First, show the learner a full shape.

Example: A circle.

Explain:

“This is one whole.”

Write:

1 whole


Step 2 — Remind About Halves

Before teaching quarters, link back to halves.

Draw a line through the circle.

Now there are 2 equal parts.

Explain:

“Two halves make one whole.”

Write:

½ + ½ = 1

Make sure the learner is confident here first.


Step 3 — Introduce Quarters

Now split the circle again.

Draw another line across the first line (a cross ✚).

The circle now has 4 equal parts.

Explain slowly:

“These are called quarters.”

“A quarter means one of four equal parts.”

Write:

4 quarters = 1 whole


Step 4 — Show The Number Fraction

Point to one piece.

Explain:

“This is one quarter.”

Write:

¼

Say:

“One out of four.”


Step 5 — Count The Pieces

Point and count together:

1 quarter
2 quarters
3 quarters
4 quarters

Explain:

“When we have all 4 quarters, we have one whole again.”

Write:

¼ + ¼ + ¼ + ¼ = 1


Step 6 — Colour Activity

Ask learner to colour:

• 1 quarter
• 2 quarters (half)
• 3 quarters
• 4 quarters (whole)

This helps visual understanding.


Step 7 — Link Back To Half

Show:

2 quarters = ½

Explain:

“Two quarters make a half.”

This connects old learning to new learning.


Teaching With Other Shapes

Square

Draw a square.

Split into 4 small squares.

Each small square = ¼


Rectangle

Split into 4 equal strips.

Each strip = ¼


Triangle

Split from the centre into 3 or 4 equal parts (use visuals carefully).

Explain only when learner is ready.


Everyday Examples

Use real objects:

• Pizza slices
• Chocolate bars
• Sandwich quarters
• Cakes

Say:

“If we cut pizza into 4 slices, each slice is a quarter.”


Step-By-Step Language For Staff

Use clear phrases:

• “One whole”
• “Cut into 4 equal parts”
• “Each part is a quarter”
• “Four quarters make a whole”

Avoid complex maths language at first.


Key Learning Ladder

Teach in this order:

1️⃣ Whole
2️⃣ Halves
3️⃣ Quarters
4️⃣ Link quarters to halves
5️⃣ Move to other shapes

Do not skip steps.


Key Message

Learners may understand halves…

…but need extra visual, step-by-step teaching to understand quarters.

Shapes + colouring + counting = best practice.


Writing

Easy Read — Teaching Basic Multiplication & Division Together
Support for Learners with Dyscalculia


Why Link Multiplication and Division?

Multiplication and division are connected.

They use the same numbers — just in different ways.

Teaching them together helps learners understand maths relationships.


Start With A Simple Fact

Example:

2 × 2 = 4

Explain in words:

“Two groups of two make four.”


Turn It Into A Division Question

Now show the same numbers differently:

How many 2s are in 4?

Write:

4 ÷ 2 = 2

Explain:

“If we split 4 into groups of 2, we get 2 groups.”


Show It Visually

Draw 4 circles:

● ● ● ●

Group them into 2s:

(● ●) (● ●)

Count the groups:

1 group
2 groups

Answer = 2


Use Real Objects

Use:

• Counters
• Blocks
• Sweets
• Coins

Physically group them.

Hands-on learning strengthens understanding.


Teaching Language

Use simple phrases:

Multiplication:
“Groups of”

Division:
“How many groups?”

Example:

2 × 3 = 6
“Two groups of three make six.”

6 ÷ 3 = 2
“How many 3s are in six?”


More Examples

Example 1

3 × 2 = 6
Two groups of three? or three groups of two (show both).

6 ÷ 2 = 3
How many 2s in 6? = 3


Example 2

5 × 2 = 10

“How many 2s in 10?”

10 ÷ 2 = 5


Example 3

4 × 2 = 8

“How many 2s in 8?”

8 ÷ 2 = 4


Teaching Tip — Fact Families

Show learners number families:

2 × 2 = 4
2 × 2 = 4
4 ÷ 2 = 2
4 ÷ 2 = 2

Same numbers — different symbols.

This builds number relationships.


Why This Helps Dyscalculic Learners

It:

• Reduces memorisation pressure
• Builds logic understanding
• Links concepts together
• Uses repetition safely
• Supports visual grouping


Key Message

If a learner understands:

“2 groups of 2 = 4”

They can also understand:

“How many 2s in 4?”

Multiplication and division become connected, not separate maths problems.

Writing

Easy Read — Age-Respectful Maths Support
Supporting Learners with Dyscalculia & Maths Difficulties


Key Principle

Maths support should match the learner’s needs — not their age.

A learner may be:

• 4 years old
• 14 years old
• 40 years old
• 104 years old

If they did not receive the right teaching earlier, they may still need foundation support now.

There should be no stigma in learning at any age.


Not About Levels — About Processing

Maths difficulty is not always about “low level.”

It is about:

• How the brain processes numbers
• Learning disability impact
• Teaching style received
• Missed education support

Two learners the same age may need very different teaching approaches.


Example — Basic Addition

Maths fact:

4 + 4 = 8

Some learners memorise this.

Others need to see it.


Teaching Young Children

Use real objects.

Example:

4 teddy bears + 4 teddy bears.

Ask:

“How many bears are there now?”

Child counts:

1…2…3…4…5…6…7…8

Answer = 8

This builds number sense.


School-Based Visuals

Teachers may use:

• Bear pictures
• Counters
• Toy blocks
• Classroom objects

Visual grouping helps understanding.


Supporting Older Children & Teenagers

Using teddy bears may feel too young.

Instead use:

• Sports balls
• Phones
• Books
• Game tokens
• Money coins

Example:

4 footballs + 4 footballs = 8

Still visual — but age-appropriate.


Supporting Adults

Adults may feel embarrassed using child-style resources.

Adapt visuals to adult life:

• £/$ coins
• Work tools
• Shopping items
• Coffee cups
• Budget examples

Example:

4 coins + 4 coins = 8 coins

Same maths — respectful context.


Picture Use — Done Respectfully

Pictures should:

• Support learning
• Match age interests
• Avoid babyish tone
• Be optional, not forced

Visual learning is valid at any age.


Important Staff Message

Never assume:

“Too old for object learning.”

Instead think:

“What visual method fits this learner respectfully?”


Inclusive Teaching Mindset

Say:

“Let’s find a way that works for you.”

Not:

“You should know this already.”


Key Message

Foundation maths can be learned at any age.

Whether using:

• Bears
• Footballs
• Coins
• Everyday objects

The goal is understanding — not judgement.

Easy Read — Supporting Employees with Dyscalculia in the Workplace


Dyscalculia and Real-Life Maths

People with Dyscalculia can:

• Understand numbers in some situations
• Struggle with numbers in other situations

For example:

  • When you were in school, you used cubes, played shops, and practised money.

  • You could count and give money in role-play.

  • But working out change in your head was difficult.

Even today, in shops or workplaces:

  • Many tills are computerized.

  • Cards are used a lot.

  • Cash is still used sometimes.

People with Dyscalculia may find it hard to calculate change quickly or accurately in real life.


Why This Matters in Workplaces

  • The world of work is unpredictable.

  • Employees may not always use the same methods they learned in school.

  • Mental calculation under pressure can be stressful.

Without support, people may:

  • Feel embarrassed

  • Make mistakes

  • Lose confidence


Practical Support Employers Can Provide

1️⃣ Accessible Cheat Sheets

  • Provide simple, easy-to-read sheets for staff to check calculations.

  • Example: “If a customer gives $10 for a $6.50 purchase, the change is $3.50.”


2️⃣ Step-by-Step Guides

  • Show the method for giving change or doing calculations.

  • Can be laminated or on screen for reference.


3️⃣ Ask for Help When Needed

  • Employees should know it’s okay to call a manager for guidance.

  • No need to feel embarrassed — it is a workplace support.


4️⃣ Use Technology Where Possible

  • Tills or apps that calculate change

  • Scanners and card readers

  • Digital payment methods

These tools reduce mistakes and stress.


5️⃣ Respect and Understanding

  • Remember: difficulty is not laziness.

  • Employees are trying their best.

  • Simple support creates confidence and independence.


Key Message

People with Dyscalculia can work successfully in any job — with small, respectful adjustments.

Support is about:

  • Reducing embarrassment

  • Preventing mistakes

  • Building confidence

Even if school teaching used cubes or role-play, adults need practical, workplace-focused tools.

Dyscalculia Module

 

What is Dyscalculia?

Dyscalculia is a specific learning disability that affects a person’s ability to understand numbers, math’s concepts, and numerical reasoning.

It is sometimes called:

“Number dyslexia”

“Math learning disability”

“Number processing disorder”

But the correct term is Dyscalculia.


Key Facts

It affects number understanding, not intelligence.

People can have average or high IQ.

It is a brain-based difference in how numbers are processed.

It can affect both children and adults.

Many people are undiagnosed until later life.


Common Difficulties

Many of the 29 points you listed fit recognized dyscalculia traits. These are often grouped into areas:

1. Number Sense Difficulties

Understanding quantity (e.g., which is bigger: 7 or 9).

Estimating numbers.

Recognizing number patterns.

Subitizing (seeing 4 objects and knowing it’s 4 without counting).


2. Calculation Difficulties

Mental math’s is very hard.

Need to use fingers, paper, or objects.

Trouble with:

Borrowing/carrying

Times tables

Multi-step problems

May switch operations (e.g., add instead of subtract).


3. Working Memory Difficulties

Forgetting steps in maths problems.

Losing place mid-calculation.

Difficulty holding numbers in mind.


4. Visual–Spatial Difficulties

Numbers not lining up in columns.

Reversing digits.

Difficulty reading graphs or maps.

Confusion with left/right.


5. Time & Direction Difficulties

Reading analogue clocks.

Estimating time.

Following directions.

Orientation problems.


6. Emotional Impact

Very important point you raised.

People may experience:

Maths anxiety

Panic or dread

Low confidence

Shame or embarrassment

Avoidance of jobs or education involving maths

This emotional impact is very real and widely recognised.


Causes of Dyscalculia (Clarified)

Research suggests dyscalculia is linked to:

Brain development differences

Particularly in areas that process:

Quantity

Magnitude

Spatial reasoning

It can co-occur with:

Dyslexia

Dyspraxia

ADHD

Autism

Brain injury

Can cause acquired dyscalculia, but:

Developmental dyscalculia (born with it) is not usually caused by injury.

It is more about neurological wiring differences.

Your reflection about mild brain injury and epilepsy is valid personally — but medically this would be considered co-occurring, not the sole cause in most cases.


Adult Diagnosis & Support

You raised an important life issue: testing and employment.

Yes — adults can be assessed.

Assessment may involve:

Educational psychologist testing

Cognitive processing tests

Maths achievement tests

In the U.S., support may include:

Workplace accommodations (ADA law)

Extra time

Calculator use

Written instructions

Assistive technology

Funding routes sometimes include:

Vocational rehabilitation services

Adult education programs

Disability employment services


Famous People & Dyscalculia

Evidence for famous figures is mixed.

Some confirmed or widely reported:

Cher (reported maths difficulties)

Henry Winkler (learning difficulties; dyslexia confirmed, dyscalculia debated)

Mick Hucknall (self-reported number blindness)

Others (like Einstein, Edison, Franklin, Bill Gates) have no confirmed dyscalculia diagnosis — often myths or speculation.

It’s best in educational material to say:

“Reported or believed to have had maths difficulties”

rather than confirmed dyscalculia.


Understanding Dyscalculia: Challenges First, Then Strengths

Before focusing on the strengths of Dyscalculia, it is important to speak honestly about the difficulties it can cause in everyday life.

As someone with a learning difficulty myself, I understand from personal experience that Dyscalculia is not just about struggling in maths lessons at school — it can affect many areas of adult life too.

One of the biggest challenges is managing money.

People with Dyscalculia may have difficulty:

• Understanding the value of money
• Counting change correctly
• Budgeting week to week
• Paying bills on time
• Understanding bank statements
• Managing direct debits and finances
• Avoiding debt or financial mistakes

This is not because someone is careless or irresponsible — it is because numbers and calculations can feel confusing, overwhelming, or even frightening.

Many people need extra support with financial monitoring, such as:

• Help from family members
• Support workers or advocates
• Budget planners or apps
• Reminders for payments
• Simplified banking tools

Without the right support, financial stress can impact mental health, confidence, and independence.

Dyscalculia can also affect:

• Telling the time
• Measuring or cooking
• Following timetables
• Travel planning
• Understanding distances or directions

These daily challenges are real, and they should never be dismissed or minimised.


Moving Forward — Strengths of Dyscalculia

Despite the amount of difficulty Dyscalculia can cause, it is just as important to recognise the strengths that many people develop.

Having Dyscalculia does not mean someone lacks intelligence — it simply means their brain processes numbers differently.

Many people with Dyscalculia show strengths in areas such as:

Creative Thinking
They may excel in art, design, music, writing, or storytelling.

Problem-Solving
They often find alternative, practical ways to approach challenges.

Verbal Communication
Strong speaking, listening, and discussion skills are common.

Empathy and Understanding
Living with a hidden difficulty can build compassion for others.

Resilience
Managing daily challenges builds determination and perseverance.

Big-Picture Thinking
Some people are better at conceptual or visual thinking rather than numerical detail.


A Balanced Understanding

It is important to hold both truths at the same time:

Dyscalculia can create real barriers in areas like money management and daily living.

But it can also come with unique strengths, perspectives, and talents.

With the right support, understanding, and accommodations, people with Dyscalculia can live independent, successful, and fulfilling lives — just in ways that work best for them.












Quiz — Answers & Explanations

Here are the completed answers to your quiz.


1. What is dyscalculia?

Correct answer:
B. A difficulty that affects the ability to understand numbers and math


2. Common signs of dyscalculia in children?

Correct answers:

A. Trouble remembering basic math facts

B. Difficulty with time, schedules, and directions

D. Struggling to understand quantities

(Spelling difficulty = dyslexia, not dyscalculia)


3. Appropriate support strategies?

Correct answers:

B. Using manipulatives (blocks, counters)

D. Teaching through real-life examples

(Writing answers down can help but is not a core teaching strategy.)


4. What does CRA stand for?

Concrete – Representational – Abstract

Teaching sequence:

Concrete – Use objects.

Representational – Use pictures/diagrams.

Abstract – Use numbers/symbols.


5. Helpful tools?

Correct answers:

A. Number lines

B. Graph paper

C. Flashcards with equations

(Plain paper alone is not specialised support.)


6. Often confused with?

Correct answer:

D. All of the above

It can overlap/confuse with:

Autism

Dyspraxia

Dysgraphia

Dyslexia

ADHD


7. Exam accommodations?

Correct answers:

A. Extra time

C. Calculator

D. Formula sheets / number charts

(Dictionary or Speak & Spell are literacy tools.)


8. Dyscalculia always occurs with low IQ?

Correct answer:

False

Intelligence is unrelated.


9. Emotional impact?

Correct answers:

Math anxiety and low self-esteem

Frustration and avoidance


10. Which is NOT an evidence-based intervention?

You didn’t list options, so here is a completed version:

Not evidence-based examples:

“Just try harder”

Timed pressure drills alone

Punishment for mistakes

Removing calculators as discipline

Evidence-based interventions include:

CRA approach

Multi-sensory maths teaching

Repetition with visuals

Assistive technology


Gentle Reflection

Your lived-experience descriptions are powerful and valid.

Particularly accurate areas you highlighted:

Finger counting reliance

Paper-based working

Borrowing confusion

Time learning delay

Spatial issues

Anxiety/frustration

Training Module: Understanding Dyscalculia

Level 1 – Awareness


1. Learning Outcomes

By the end of this module, learners will be able to:

Define dyscalculia.

Recognise common signs and traits.

Understand emotional impacts.

Identify support strategies.

Know how to make learning and work more accessible.


2. What is Dyscalculia?

Dyscalculia is a specific learning disability that affects a person’s ability to understand numbers and math’s.

It can impact:

Counting

Calculations

Number value

Time

Direction

Problem-solving with numbers

It is sometimes called “number blindness” or “math learning disability.”


Important Facts

Dyscalculia is not linked to intelligence.

People can have average or high IQ.

It is a brain-based processing difference.

It can affect children and adults.

Many people remain undiagnosed for years.


3. How Common is Dyscalculia?

Research suggests:

Around 3–7% of the population may have dyscalculia.

It often occurs alongside:

Dyslexia

Dyspraxia

ADHD

Autism


4. Signs of Dyscalculia

Every person is different, but common signs include:


Number Understanding

Difficulty understanding quantity.

Struggles comparing numbers.

Poor estimation skills.

Confusion with number value.

Example: Not knowing which is larger — 47 or 74.


Calculation Difficulties

Trouble adding, subtracting, multiplying, dividing.

Difficulty with borrowing/carrying.

Switching operations by mistake.

Forgetting maths facts.

Example: Doing addition during subtraction.


Mental Maths Difficulties

Many people:

Cannot calculate in their head.

Need paper or fingers.

Use objects to visualise numbers.

This is linked to working memory overload.


Time & Direction

People may struggle with:

Reading analogue clocks.

Understanding timetables.

Left and right confusion.

Following directions.


Visual–Spatial Difficulties

Numbers not lining up in columns.

Reversing digits.

Difficulty reading maps or graphs.

Poor spatial organisation.


Sequencing & Steps

Forgetting maths procedures.

Missing steps in equations.

Copying numbers in wrong order.


5. Emotional Impact

Dyscalculia is not just academic — it affects wellbeing.

People may experience:

Maths anxiety

Fear or dread of numbers

Low self-esteem

Embarrassment

Avoidance of education or jobs

Some learners feel:

“Stupid” or “left behind” — which is untrue and harmful.

Emotional support is just as important as academic support.


6. Causes of Dyscalculia

Dyscalculia is linked to differences in brain development, especially areas that process:

Quantity

Magnitude

Spatial awareness


It can be:

Developmental

Present from birth.

Acquired

After brain injury or neurological illness (less common).


Co-occurring Conditions

It may occur alongside:

Dyslexia

Dyspraxia

ADHD

Epilepsy

Brain injury effects

But one does not automatically cause the other.


7. Strengths of People with Dyscalculia

Important strengths often include

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Thursday, 5 February 2026

dysgraphia module

 


handwriting difficulty and disability: you accurately describe dysgraphia as a condition that makes handwriting difficult and can

•         be considered a disability. the struggle to write neatly and tidily, even with lined paper and margins, is a primary characteristic.   

•        handwriting learning difficulty/impairment: you also correctly identify it as a learning difficulty specifically affecting handwriting.   

•        reading and writing ability vs. presentation: you highlight that individuals with dysgraphia often read and may be able to write,

•         but their handwriting may be messy and disorganized without visual cues like lines and margins.

key challenges associated with dysgraphia:

•        neatness and legibility: difficulty producing neat and legible handwriting.   

•        expressing thoughts in writing: challenges in organizing and expressing thoughts clearly on paper so that they make sense to others.   

•        planning and organizing written work: struggles with planning and structuring written tasks and ideas.   

•        grip on writing tools: difficulty with the physical act of gripping pens and pencils correctly and comfortably.   

•        avoidance of writing-related tasks: a tendency to avoid activities like writing, drawing, and coloring due to the difficulty they present.   

•        automaticity of letter/number formation: affects the ability to automatically form letters and numbers, making writing slow and

•         effortful process.

•        slower task completion: dysgraphia can slow down writing speed, reading (due to the effort involved in the writing process),

•         and overall completion of tasks and coursework.   

in summary, your description effectively captures the essence of dysgraphia as a learning difficulty that primarily 

impacts handwriting and the physical act of writing but can also extend to challenges in organizing written thoughts 

and potentially affecting the speed of other related tasks. it's important to remember that while the most visible sign

 is often messy handwriting, the underlying difficulties with motor skills, visual-spatial processing, and language processing

 can contribute to the broader challenges faced by individuals with dysgraphia.

sources and related content

 

what is dysgraphia? | reading rockets 

 

 

 

www.readingrockets.org

 

 

dysgraphia: what it is, symptoms, diagnosis & treatment - cleveland clinic 

 

 

 

my.clevelandclinic.org

 

 

disorder of written expression and dysgraphia: definition, diagnosis, and management - pmc - pubmed central 

 

 

   

pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov

 

ttps://civilservice.blog.gov.uk/wp-content/uploads/sites/86/2020/03/dyslexia-dyspraxia-dyscalculia-and-dysgraphia-line-manager-toolkit.pdf

dysgraphia is a learning difficulty that affects writing, organizing, spelling, grammar, and untidy handwriting. meaning not only messy handwriting but when paper is blank with no lines or margins, writing is all over the place, not straight.

when it comes to being disorganized, they may struggle to paragraph their writing into topics, not knowing where to start their writing, the beginning, middle end and so on.

i have had these struggles throughout my own life but overcome some of them.

before computers, the internet etc was around, when i was in my early years of school, i remembered my teacher been puzzled why my pencils were breaking and why i was sharpening them ever so often. i remember wrists aching a lot through writing and not knowing. i did not think i was alone on that, i thought the other children were facing the same situation so i did not say anything because i thought there was not nothing anyone could do.

 

 

Easy Read Module – Dysgraphia (Handwriting Difficulty) – Module 

Slide 1 – Title

Dysgraphia
Easy Read Module
Handwriting Difficulty and Learning Support


Slide 2 – What is Dysgraphia?

  • Dysgraphia is a condition that makes handwriting difficult.

  • It is also considered a learning disability.

  • People with dysgraphia may be able to read and write, but:

    • Their handwriting is often messy.

    • Lines, margins, and visual cues help them write better.


Slide 3 – Key Challenges

People with dysgraphia may find it hard to:

  • Make handwriting neat and legible.

  • Organize thoughts on paper clearly.

  • Plan and structure writing tasks.

  • Hold pens or pencils comfortably.

  • Avoid writing, drawing, or coloring tasks.

  • Write letters and numbers automatically.

  • Complete writing tasks quickly.


Slide 4 – How Dysgraphia Can Affect Life

  • Slower completion of homework, tests, or coursework.

  • Reading may be slower due to writing effort.

  • Frustration when trying to express ideas in writing.

  • Misunderstood by teachers or peers because handwriting looks “messy.”


Slide 5 – Why Support is Important

  • Dysgraphia is not laziness or lack of effort.

  • The brain has difficulty coordinating movement, visual-spatial, and language processing for writing.

  • Support can include:

    • Assistive technology (typing, voice-to-text apps).

    • Extra time for written tasks.

    • Practice and exercises for fine motor skills.

    • Clear instructions and visual cues.


Slide 6 – Strengths of People with Dysgraphia

Even with challenges, people with dysgraphia can:

  • Be creative problem solvers.

  • Have strong reading and speaking skills.

  • Show resilience and determination.

  • Learn to use tools and strategies to succeed.


Slide 7 – Sources & Further Reading

  • Reading Rockets – What is Dysgraphia?
    www.readingrockets.org

  • Cleveland Clinic – Dysgraphia: Symptoms, Diagnosis & Treatment
    my.clevelandclinic.org


Slide 8 – Quiz / Questions

  1. What is dysgraphia?

  2. Name three challenges people with dysgraphia might face.

  3. Is messy handwriting a sign of laziness? (True / False)

  4. Name two types of support that can help someone with dysgraphia.

  5. How can technology help people with dysgraphia?


Name two possible support strategies for someone with dysgraphia.

How can technology help people with dysgraphia?

Is dysgraphia the same as bad handwriting? explain your answer.

Can dysgraphia be cured? Why or why not?

 

Easy Read Module – Dysgraphia (Handwriting Difficulty) – Module 9

Slide 1 – Title

Dysgraphia
Easy Read Module
Handwriting Difficulty and Learning Support


Slide 2 – What is Dysgraphia?

Dysgraphia is a condition that makes handwriting difficult.

It is also considered a learning disability.

People with dysgraphia may be able to read and write, but:

Their handwriting is often messy.

Lines, margins, and visual cues help them write better.


Slide 3 – Key Challenges

People with dysgraphia may find it hard to:

Make handwriting neat and legible.

Organize thoughts on paper clearly.

Plan and structure writing tasks.

Hold pens or pencils comfortably.

Avoid writing, drawing, or coloring tasks.

Write letters and numbers automatically.

Complete writing tasks quickly.


Slide 4 – How Dysgraphia Can Affect Life

Slower completion of homework, tests, or coursework.

Reading may be slower due to writing effort.

Frustration when trying to express ideas in writing.

Misunderstood by teachers or peers because handwriting looks “messy.”


Slide 5 – Why Support is Important

Dysgraphia is not laziness or lack of effort.

The brain has difficulty coordinating movement, visual-spatial, and language processing for writing.

Support can include:

Assistive technology (typing, voice-to-text apps).

Extra time for written tasks.

Practice and exercises for fine motor skills.

Clear instructions and visual cues.


Slide 6 – Strengths of People with Dysgraphia

Even with challenges, people with dysgraphia can:

Be creative problem solvers.

Have strong reading and speaking skills.

Show resilience and determination.

Learn to use tools and strategies to succeed.


Slide 7 – Sources & Further Reading

Reading Rockets – What is Dysgraphia?
www.readingrockets.org

Cleveland Clinic – Dysgraphia: Symptoms, Diagnosis & Treatment
my.clevelandclinic.org


Slide 8 – Quiz / Questions

What is dysgraphia?

Name three challenges people with dysgraphia might face.

Is messy handwriting a sign of laziness? (True / False)

Name two types of support that can help someone with dysgraphia.

How can technology help people with dysgraphia?


Slide 9 – Key Messages

Dysgraphia is a learning difficulty, not a choice.

Handwriting struggles are often hidden, but support makes a big difference.

People with dysgraphia can be creative, capable, and successful with the right help.

 

  dysgraphia quiz

instructions: choose the best answer for each question.

1. What is dysgraphia?
a) a type of anxiety disorder
b) a learning disability that affects writing ability
c) a speech and language disorder
d) a reading disability

2. which of the following is a common difficulty for people with dysgraphia?
a) hearing loud noises
b) running and jumping
c) writing neatly and consistently
d) understanding spoken directions

3. dysgraphia affects which main area of learning?
a) reading fluency
b) verbal reasoning
c) written expression
d) mathematical calculation

4. what are some signs of handwriting difficulties in dysgraphia?
a) talking too fast
b) trouble staying on lines, uneven spacing, and poor grip
c) forgetting words
d) singing during tasks

5. true or false: dysgraphia is caused by low intelligence.
a) true
b) false

6. which of the following might a person with dysgraphia struggle with in writing tasks?
a) spelling and grammar
b) choosing correct answers in quizzes
c) speaking in front of others
d) drawing pictures

7. what kind of support can help someone with dysgraphia?
a) punishment for messy writing
b) early intervention, occupational therapy, and classroom accommodations
c) ignoring the problem so it goes away
d) asking them to write faster

8. how might a student with dysgraphia feel about writing tasks?
a) excited and relaxed
b) happy to write essays quickly
c) frustrated and may avoid writing
d) confused about math problems

9. what is the dsm-5?
a) a book of stories about learning
b) a spelling guide for students
c) a diagnostic manual used to identify mental and learning disorders
d) a handwriting exercise book

10. why is early diagnosis and support important for dysgraphia?
a) it prevents eyesight problems
b) it helps individuals thrive with the right tools and strategies
c) it avoids needing to write ever again
d) it makes handwriting perfect overnight

 

 

 


๐Ÿ“˜ Easy Read Module Comparing Dyslexia and Dyspraxia

 



๐Ÿง  What are they?

Dyslexia and Dyspraxia are both neurodevelopmental conditions.

This means:

You are born with them

They affect how the brain works

They are lifelong

They are not caused by intelligence

People can have one or both.


๐Ÿ“– What is Dyslexia?

Dyslexia mainly affects:

Reading

Writing

Spelling

Processing words

People may find it hard to:

Read quickly

Spell correctly

Copy from a board

Understand written instructions

It is a literacy-based learning difficulty.


๐Ÿƒ What is Dyspraxia?

Dyspraxia affects:

Movement

Coordination

Balance

Motor planning

People may find it hard to:

Tie shoelaces

Do up buttons

Ride a bike

Carry items safely

It is a coordination and motor skills difficulty.


๐Ÿ” Key Differences

Area

Dyslexia

Dyspraxia

Main difficulty

Reading & writing

Movement & coordination

Brain function

Language processing

Motor planning

School impact

Literacy tasks

PE, handwriting, organisation

Physical skills

Usually unaffected

Often affected

Speech impact

Processing words

Mouth coordination (sometimes)


๐Ÿค Similarities

Dyslexia and Dyspraxia can be similar in some ways.

Both may affect:

Processing speed

Memory

Organisation

Confidence

Anxiety levels

Both are:

Hidden disabilities

Often misunderstood

Lifelong conditions


๐Ÿงฉ Daily Life Comparison

Dyslexia

People may struggle with:

Reading books

Writing essays

Spelling words

Following written instructions

Support may include:

Audiobooks

Spellcheckers

Extra time


Dyspraxia

People may struggle with:

Dressing

Cooking

Driving

Balance

Support may include:

Occupational therapy

Adaptive tools

Extra time for tasks


๐ŸŒŸ Strengths Comparison

Dyslexia strengths

Many people are:

Creative thinkers

Big-picture learners

Good storytellers

Problem solvers


Dyspraxia strengths

Many people are:

Determined

Resilient

Creative

Empathetic


๐Ÿง  Can Someone Have Both?

Yes.

Many people have:

Dyslexia + Dyspraxia

Dyslexia + ADHD

Dyspraxia + Autism

This is called co-occurrence.

Support should look at the whole person.


๐Ÿ’ฌ How It Can Feel

Dyslexia

People may feel:

Embarrassed reading aloud

Frustrated writing

Tired from processing text


Dyspraxia

People may feel:

Frustrated with their body

Anxious in sports

Self-conscious about coordination

Support and understanding help both.


๐Ÿงพ Key Messages

Dyslexia = literacy difficulty

Dyspraxia = coordination difficulty

Both are lifelong

Both need support

Both come with strengths


๐Ÿ“ Easy Read Questions

Section A – Multiple Choice

1. Dyslexia mainly affects:
a) Walking
b) Reading and writing
c) Balance


2. Dyspraxia affects:
a) Coordination
b) Spelling only
c) Hearing


3. True or False:
Dyspraxia affects intelligence.


Section B – Short Answer

4. Name one task that may be hard for someone with dyslexia.


5. Name one movement task that may be hard for someone with dyspraxia.


6. Can someone have both dyslexia and dyspraxia?


Section C – Thinking Question

7. Why is it important not to judge someone’s intelligence based on these conditions?

 

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