Education.com

How Can I Tell If My Child Has Dyscalculia? (page 3)

By Dr. Anna Wilson
About Dyscalculia

What should I tell my child's teacher?

A common result of dyscalculia is a high level of maths anxiety. Dyscalculic children may soon come to hate maths, and try and avoid it. Even if they are getting extra help outside of the classroom, activities in the classroom may be far too fast for them and a very discouraging experience. Talking with your child’s teacher can help make them aware of the learning disability and in finding ways of making maths lessons more productive and less stressful for your child. Even little things can help - like writing down the “mental math” problems so your child can work at his/her own pace rather than missing most of them because they were still working out the first one and didn't hear the rest.

It can be difficult talking about this to your child's teacher. Some teachers may be more receptive than others. If your child has outside help from a specialist, it may help to have them talk to the teacher. There is not very much awareness of dyscalculia in most countries (an exception being the US where most teachers are aware of math learning disability), and many teachers may not have had any training in how to teach learning disabled children. This website contains information for teachers, including links to teaching resources.

Will my child "grow out of" dyscalculia?

While it is possible that children may grow out of some difficulties with mathematics, in most cases your child will NOT grow out of dyscalculia. It is important therefore to seek help, your child needs special assistance in order to catch up on maths.

Can dyscalculia be prevented?

At the moment, no (apart from avoiding risk factors like drinking alcohol during pregnancy). In the future, one hope is to develop methods to detect dyscalculia prior to school, so that children would get extra help and monitoring before starting school and during the first years of learning maths. This is really our best chance for being able to cure or prevent dyscalculia.

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