This is a sampling of common characteristics1 found in those who have dyslexia. A child would need to exhibit several of the signs to be considered a possible dyslexic. Each child is different and unique. The signs below are mainly a compilation of two sites mentioned in the footnote.
Has delayed speech
Mixes up sounds and syllables, like “calapittar” and “mazagine”
Has chronic ear infections
Struggles in understanding directional words (right/left, before/after)
Is slow in developing a dominant hand
Has difficulty learning to tie his shoes
Has more difficulty memorizing things like her phone number, days of the week…
Has difficulty understanding the concept of rhyming
Has a relative who has dyslexia
Having some of the warning signs above or below does not mean that your child has dyslexia. However, if many of the signs continue past the age of seven, and you have a history of dyslexia in your family, it would be good to have your child tested.
Has difficulty writing letters, has odd spacing between words, has trouble keeping letters in the right place on the line (dysgraphia)
Has an unusual pencil grip (often a fist grip) and holds the pencil too tight
Prints some letters and numbers backwards beyond 1st grade
Struggles to learn the names, letters, and sounds in order (i.e., saying a, b, c,…)
Has poor written expression
Is a poor speller even after studying hard
Struggles with math, math facts, adding numbers in a column (problems that require a sequence), but understands math concepts
Has a very messy room — struggles to remember where he put things so he leaves everything out, general difficulty organizing things
Skips or misreads small words and suffixes
Has difficulty sounding out an unknown word and will often guess at the unknown word with words that are similar or makes sense
Tends to read through punctuation without noticing it
Reading comprehension is difficult for things they read themselves
Cannot sound out words so has to memorize words, which is very difficult
Can study very hard for a test on Friday morning and still forget the words by later in the day
Misspells high-frequency words — has difficulty remembering what the word looks like
Doesn’t remember to start a sentence with a capital letter and end with a period or other punctuation
Doesn’t understand the difference between a complete sentence and a fragment
Doesn’t speak smoothly
Hates school
Has a limited vocabulary because she is not reading — needs to be read to
Doesn’t know how to organize thoughts so has difficulty with writing assignments — difference between written report and oral report is huge
Has extreme difficulty learning a foreign language
May be a gifted musician but has difficulty reading music
Many will drop out of high school because they do not receive help
Slow reader — hard to read technical information
Poor speller
Avoids writing memos or letters
Often competent in oral language
Still has trouble with left and right (directionality confused), trouble with reading a map
Still confuses b and d, mainly when one is hot, tired, sick, or under a lot of stress
Average student (Cs) who worked hard for those grades
Has difficulty proving intelligence on paper (well-versed on a subject orally)
May be good at “reading” people (intuitive)
Trouble learning a foreign language (speaking may not be hard, but learning to read, write, and spell in a foreign language is very difficult)
Information on this page was taken from Bright Solutions and The International Dyslexia Association.