Friday, August 26, 2011

Dysgraphia  is a learning disability resulting from the difficulty in expressing thoughts in writing  and graphing.  It generally refers to poor handwriting.  A student with any degree of handwriting difficulty may be labeled dysgrahic by some educational specialists, but may or may not need special education services.  Students with dysgraphia often have sequencing problems.  Studies indicate that what usually appears to be a perceptual problem (reversing letters/numbers, writing words backwards, writing letters out of order, and very sloppy handwriting) usually seems to be directly related to sequential/rational information processing.  They have difficulty with sequence of letters and words as they write.  These students need to slow down in order to write accurately, or experience extreme difficulty with the mechanics of  writing.  Sometimes as a result of slowing down, they lose the thought they are trying to write about.

Students with ADHD often experience significant difficulty with writing and formulas in general and handwriting in particular.  This is because ADHD students are often processing information at a very rapid rate and simply don't have the fine-motor skills to keep up with their thoughts.  Please remember that written language is the most difficult form of language expression.

Although most students with dysgraphia do not have visual or perceptual processing problems, they may experience difficulty with the writing speed and clarity simply because they aren't able to fully process the visual information as they are placing it on the page.  Also if they have a general auditory or language processing weakness weakness, they will have difficulty with language expression. (www,wvu.edu)

Next Time:  Symptoms of Dysgraphia

1 comment:

  1. Great information. This is great for parents, students and teachers to understand what dysgraphia is. I hope everyone is reading your important blog!

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