Defining and understanding dyslexia: past, present and future. 2020

Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
Department of Experimental Psychology and St John's College, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.

Dyslexia is a difficulty in learning to decode (read aloud) and to spell. DSM5 classifies dyslexia as one form of neurodevelopmental disorder. Neurodevelopmental disorders are heritable, life-long conditions with early onset. For many years, research on dyslexia proceeded on the basis that it was a specific learning difficulty - specific meaning that the difficulty could not be explained in terms of obvious causes such as sensory problems or general learning difficulties (low IQ). However, the failure to find qualitative differences in reading, and phonological skills, between children with dyslexia and children with more general learning problems led this kind of 'discrepancy' definition to fall from favour. The Rose Review stated that dyslexia can occur across the IQ range and that poor decoding skills require the same kinds of intervention irrespective of IQ. In this paper, we argue that loosening the criteria for dyslexia has influenced common understanding of the condition and led to diagnostic confusion. In the longer term, the use of the term may need to change. Implications for research and practice are discussed.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
April 2017, Pain,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
November 1997, Journal of clinical neurophysiology : official publication of the American Electroencephalographic Society,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
November 2008, Neuron,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
September 1997, Seminars for nurse managers,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
November 2004, Gastrointestinal endoscopy,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
January 2000, Bulletin of the Menninger Clinic,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
April 2018, Hong Kong medical journal = Xianggang yi xue za zhi,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
December 2014, Current heart failure reports,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
May 2016, Toxicology and applied pharmacology,
Margaret J Snowling, and Charles Hulme, and Kate Nation
January 1979, The Annals of occupational hygiene,
Copied contents to your clipboard!