Approximately 85% of children diagnosed with learning difficulties have a primary problem with reading and language skills. What baffles many parents is the “where” and “why” the process breaks down. Problems may occur in any area -decoding, comprehension, or retention. Many experts, however, believe the root of reading problems lies in decoding.
Decoding Difficulties
Decoding is the process by which a word is broken into individual phonemes (sounds) and recognized based on those phonemes. For example, a proficient reader will separate the sounds “fr” “aw” and “guh” in the word “frog”. Someone who has difficulty reading may not hear and differentiate these phonemes. Even experts do not understand why this is.
Signs of decoding difficulty:
- trouble sounding out words and recognizing words out of context
- confusion between letters and the sounds they represent
- slow oral reading rate
- reading without expression
- ignoring punctuation while reading
Comprehension Difficulties
Comprehension relies on mastery of decoding; children who struggle to decode find it difficult to understand and remember what has been read. Because their efforts to grasp individual words are so exhausting, they have no resources left for understanding.
Signs of comprehension difficulty:
- confusion about the meaning of words and sentences
- inability to connect ideas in a passage
- omission of, or glossing over detail
- difficulty distinguishing important information from minor details
- lack of concentration
Retention Difficulties
Retention requires both decoding and comprehension of what is written. This task relies on high level cognitive skills, including memory and the ability to group and retrieve related areas. As students progress through grade levels, they are expected to retain more and more of what they read. From third grade on, reading to learn is central to classroom work. By high school it is an essential ask.
Signs of retention difficulty:
- trouble remembering or summarizing what is read
- difficulty connecting what is read to prior knowledge
- difficulty applying content of a text to personal experiences