What’s a reading LD?

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Reading learning disabilities, such as dyslexia, ADD, aphasia, and brain injury, can affect an individual’s ability to read, learn, reason, speak, and write. Dyslexia is a reading disorder that affects the ability to understand written text, while ADD impairs focus and attention span. Brain injury and aphasia can also impair reading and learning abilities.

A reading learning disability can affect an individual’s ability to read, the ability to learn, or the ability to read and learn. These disabilities can impact an individual in the sense that they will affect their ability to listen, write, read, reason or speak. Examples of such disabilities include dyslexia, attention deficit disorder (ADD), aphasia, and brain injury.

Dyslexia is more of a reading disorder than a learning disability. It affects those individuals who suffer from it by hampering their ability to decipher components of language such as letters, alphabets and symbols. Dyslexia centers on each individual’s ability to understand written text. People with dyslexia may have good reasoning and cognitive skills, and an inability to read does not in any way mean that they are intellectually slow.

Dyslexia is a type of reading learning disability that usually begins in the childhood of people who suffer from it. This problem can be somewhat mitigated through repeated practice and other focused efforts. The reality is that in severe cases of this learning disability, the problem can last for an individual’s life as the problem has to do with an imbalance in the brains of those who have the condition.

ADD is included as an example of a reading learning disability due to it affecting an individual’s ability to focus and learn. This condition causes people who suffer from it to be hyperactive to the point that they find it difficult to settle down for extended periods. This deficiency shortens their attention span and as such impairs their ability to learn.

A brain injury can also be classified as a reading learning disability primarily because traumatic head injuries affecting the brain can alter normal brain functioning to the point that the individual with some degree of brain damage will be unable to learn or read. Apasia occurs when something damages the part of the brain that processes language. Many factors can cause this disability, including a stroke, dementia, a head infection, a brain tumor, or a head injury. During a stroke, blood flow to the brain is cut off and cells in that part of the brain begin to die. This leads to a disability that can impair the individual’s ability to read, understand or learn.




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