Analyzing the Psychology of Reading Difficulty
“Reading difficulty” covers a wide range of issues that occur while deciphering words and letters or linking words and phrases to their meanings. Anyone can have a reading difficulty. Such difficulties aren’t signs of intelligence. Reading difficulties arise in the brain where individuals translate letters and words into information they can use. The reading process is broken into different parts – deciphering, understanding, and retaining information.
Addressing the Difficulties
Reading difficulties pertaining to the brain’s neurological processes can surface as ADHD, dyslexia, and other medical conditions. Such difficulties can also crop up when a person not diagnosed with a medical condition associated with reading difficulties fails to develop adequate vocabulary. Though such difficulties make comprehending and inferring information difficult, people can overcome them by implementing interventions.
While some interventions are simple, discrete approaches, others need extensive remedial actions. To find out the appropriate intervention, the evaluator has to find the exact area the person is having trouble with while reading with respect to deciphering, understanding, or retaining information learned. Thus, the approach to help a person understand how to decipher words may not be the same approach used for helping a student comprehend the reading text. Additionally, one student’s strategy of deciphering words may not be effective for another battling the same issue.
Reading difficulties have no cure and don’t vanish after a while. However, there are ways to address these issues and help people with such difficulties succeed over time, though these issues usually remain all through an individual’s life. Ongoing research is trying to understand what triggers these issues and the gap between parts of reading or the entire process.
Scientific Identification and Research
Scientists are currently employing techniques like naming speed (tasks where readers put their best effort to name groups of information rapidly and correctly) to identify future reading difficulties and begin early interventions. However, no solitary test can help predict any and all reading difficulties because such difficulties could be trivial and may not obstruct learning until later in a student’s educational career. Experts are trying to integrate science regarding brain pathways’ functioning and how people think about the learning process.
For educators, the responsibility is to seek different indicators that may help them spot a reading issue. They need to observe students’ reading and search for issues like skipping words during read-aloud, spelling errors that make a word unrecognizable, the problem with remembering a story and its elements, being distracted while reading, or a considerably decreasing or rapidly increasing speed at which a student reads. If a student shows one of these actions from time to time, it does not confirm a reading problem. Typically, these weaknesses crop up alongside each other and on a regular basis.
Recent research also emphasizes that reading difficulties are associated with the sounds of letters and words, not visual issues. That’s because letters, when paired with other letters, can have diverse sounds. Additionally, some paired letters can sound similar to standalone letters. For example, the sounds of “c” in receive and cat are different. Again, the “gh” in rough sounds similar to the “f” in flower. A student with reading difficulties may find it challenging to remember and apply these rules, which could discourage him or her from reading.
It seems reading difficulties are linked to misunderstood sounds because even when you read silently, the brain is still sounding out the letters and digraphs to decipher a word, its meaning, and a word’s meaning in the context of the sentence and the overall reading. Several successful people have reading difficulties but found effective interventions and methods to address the issue depending on the condition’s severity and the component of the reading process that has been compromised.