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APD and Dyslexia

Deborah Moncrieff, PhD

June 30, 2003

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Question

My son was just recently tested for APD. He will be 7 in May so his age for the test was 6.5. My question does a child with APD also have Dyslexia? He has had a history of cronic ear infection since he was 3 months old. He has had 4 sets of tubes in the right ear and 5 in his left. He qualifies for special educational services at school. He goes down to the LD resource room and also recieves speech. One more question. What types of modifications can help him in the classroom?

Answer

The diagnosis of dyslexia is usually not made until a child has failed to acquire normal reading skills in the third grade. The diagnosis is usually based on low reading performance, especially in the decoding tasks that are part of reading unfamiliar words with regular pronunciation. In addition, it must be established that the child has normal intelligence and has been provided with adequate resources and opportunities to learn to read. Because the reading deficit is so often linked to an inability to sound out unfamiliar words, it has been thought that the problem may stem from a more basic deficit in the processing of the sound units that make up words.

Because some of those sound processing deficits can be assessed earlier than the third grade, many clinicians are now trying to determine at earlier ages which children may be at greater risk for being diagnosed as dyslexia later in school. If your child has difficulties with the sounds that make up words, he may have already been diagnosed with a phonologic awareness or phonologic processing deficit. Many children with phonologic awareness deficits on speech and language testing will also demonstrate auditory processing deficits when tested by an audiologist. When put all together, all of this means that a child diagnosed with an auditory processing deficit may be at risk for later being diagnosed with dyslexia, but it doesn't necessarily guarantee that a reading disorder will result. For some children, a failure to process sounds appropriately may represent a developmental delay that they are able to outgrow as they mature.

Debbie Moncrieff

Deborah Moncrieff is an Assistant Professor at the University of Connecticut. She specializes in pediatric audiology and auditory processing disorders and has taught classes on APD to both on-campus and distance-learning students in the AuD program at the University of Florida. She serves as a member of the board of directors of the National Coalition on Auditory Processing Disorders (NCAPD) and has conducted several workshops on APD throughout the U.S. Her research focuses on the use of electrophysiology and functional magnetic imaging to better understand auditory processing deficits in children and adults.


Deborah Moncrieff, PhD

Assistant Professor in the Communication Sciences Department at the University of Connecticut

Deborah Moncrieff received her Ph.D. from the University of Texas at Dallas in 1999 in Cognition and Neuroscience.  She is an Assistant Professor in the Communication Sciences Department at the University of Connecticut.  She uses several different methodologies to investigate how the brain processes auditory information, including standard clinical behavioral tests of auditory processing, multi-channel electrophysiology, and functional magnetic resonance imaging.  She has examined the prevalence of auditory processing disorders in school-age children, especially in those with dyslexia, and is investigating the presence of temporal processing deficits in children diagnosed with specific language impairment (SLI).  Across all ages, she is especially interested in how to provide remedial training and intervention when an auditory processing disorder has been diagnosed.  Her long-term goal is to provide deficit-specific training designed to help individuals overcome the processing deficits that interfere with comprehension and communication.


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