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Does Your Child Have Learning Disabilities
Some children breeze through classes in school and never seem to have problems learning and getting good grades. Other children struggle a bit, but they can easily catch up when they have some outside help, or learn to have better study habits. There are some children, however, that seem to falter no matter what, and they are increasingly perplexed as to why they seem to have problems learning just about anything. Many times parents just assume their child is not that bright, but more often than not, the child has learning disabilities.
If your child is performing badly in school despite their best intentions and hard work, you can consider that they may have learning disabilities. Before you jump to that conclusion, you should make sure you rule out the simple things first. Some children have hearing and eyesight problems, but they don’t know it, or they don’t want to admit it because it might mean a hearing aid or glasses. Some children get help with those two issues and then go on to do just fine in school. Their only disabilities with learning were purely physical.
If a child truly has learning disabilities, there is help out there. Once it is decided that there might be a problem, someone should diagnose what that problem is. Once it is known, it will be easy enough to find the right program to help them out. Some common learning disabilities are dyslexia, attention deficit disorder, and even milder forms of autism that were not diagnoses earlier in life. There are programs for all of those disabilities, and many more for those that might be less common.
A child with learning disabilities probably has low self esteem due to their struggles. This is when parents need to step up and explain that they are not slow or stupid in any way, but that they have a different way of learning. Once they get into the groove of learning again in a way that works for them, their self esteem will improve. Until then, parental support is very important, and can mean the difference between the child making leaps and bounds in the right direction and struggling along as they were before. Looking up examples of famous or successful people who have learning disabilities can go a long way towards easing their minds about their condition. Once they see that they are not alone, and that disabilities with learning are more common than they thought, they will be better off in the long run.
Summary
Children with learning disabilites may be hard to spot. If the child seems to have trouble learning as quickly as other children, a learning problem could be the source. Common problems are dyslexia, hearing or sight problems, and mild forms of autism.
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