FROM THE VIDEO

Key moments from How To Learn Math With Dyscalculia by Learning Success:

  • Why the word is not a verdict: a different way of processing quantity, not a permanent disability. Watch at 00:13
  • The concrete-to-abstract fix, and why most classrooms teach math backward. Watch at 01:15
  • A ten-minute home activity with beans or buttons that builds number sense tonight. Watch at 05:00

Common questions from parents

Does dyscalculia mean my child will never be good at math?

No. It describes a different way of processing quantity, not a fixed ceiling. Brain-imaging research shows that with systematic, concrete practice a child developing math skills builds the same number-processing pathways other children build, so the diagnosis describes today, not the destination.

What should I do at home tonight?

Grab beans, buttons, or blocks and have your child build small quantities, then show the same amount different ways and break it apart (“two ways to make five”). Ten focused minutes of hands-on number work builds more genuine understanding than an hour of worksheets.

Why do worksheets and flashcards stop working?

Most instruction starts with the abstract symbol and assumes meaning follows. For a child whose number sense is still developing, that link does not form on its own, so drilling the symbol harder reinforces confusion. Starting with objects, then pictures, then symbols reverses the order and lets understanding take hold.

Should I get a formal evaluation or use a screener?

A screener is a useful starting point that maps which processing systems need support so you have a plan today, but it is not a diagnosis. If your child might need formal accommodations through an IEP or 504, or you suspect a vision, hearing, or medical cause, pursue a professional evaluation too, since that is the only route to those supports.