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She'll Catch Up
“Oh, she’ll catch up,” is what Jane recalled her daughter Susan’s teachers saying throughout first and second grades. Susan, now 12, was in the lowest reading group in her classroom but teachers assured Jane that Susan was very bright and would catch up shortly.
In truth, Susan wasn’t catching up. As peers began moving past her in reading, Jane became more anxious and worried.
My Child is Struggling, But Everyone Says He is On Grade-Level...
Is your child in the gray area?
“She has trouble spelling and reading fluently, but she’s doing okay for the most part
“He’s about a year behind, but don’t worry, it will click soon…”
“She has a hard time with reading grade level text, but she is fine compared to other kids in her class who struggle so much more…”
“I understand he has a diagnosis of dyslexia, but he’s not that far behind…”
Why OG isn't Working and What You Can Do About It
Discover why Orton-Gillingham (OG) instruction sometimes falls short and what you can do about it. Weak executive functioning might hinder progress, but with strategies to gain student buy-in, provide memory supports, and develop metacognitive skills, you can enhance learning outcomes. Join our FREE online workshop for more insights!
How Much Therapy is Enough?
Typically we can help predict the length of time in a program based on standardized testing results (psychoeducational testing results, not necessarily state standardized assessments). Our team researched the length of time it would take to see consistent growth in reading ability. There were many factors at play but overall we found that student's could expect to see around 8 Standard Score points of growth in a 6-month period with therapy occurring once to twice per week. There was not a statistical difference between students being seen once to twice per week.
Why Orton-Gillingham (OG) Reading Instruction?
What is so different about OG instruction?
A major benefit is that it meets the student where they are as opposed to assuming they indirectly picked up a rule/strategy without being given the explicit rule or pattern to follow. But equally as important OG is different than reading instruction they may have received previously because it teaches the "why" of our language.
Do I Need an Evaluation?
While there may be some cases in which it is good to wait, generally the answer to this question is - YES! While you absolutely do not need an evaluation to get started with remediation, it can help guide treatment and answer many questions for you, as parents as well as for the clinicians working with your child.
Discovering a Learning Disability
The best place to begin is to identify indicators of a potential learning problem. Think about it this way; if you have a student who has average to superior intelligence, has intact sensory perception (e.g., ability to see words on the paper and hear words) and has been instructed in reading and writing by a competent teacher for months or years, but is demonstrating a significant discrepancy between their IQ and their academic achievement, it is time for an evaluation.