Common questions from parents

Is dyslexia permanent?

The brain-based difference in how your child processes language is lifelong, but reading skill is not fixed. With early, well-matched, structured instruction the large majority of struggling readers make real and lasting gains, and brain imaging shows the reading pathways physically develop. Permanent describes the diagnosis, not your child’s ceiling.

Will my child actually catch up, or only learn to cope?

Coping skills matter, but the research is more hopeful than cope. When instruction matches how your child processes language, most struggling readers move toward grade-appropriate reading rather than only working around the gap. Progress depends on the method fitting and on starting as early as is practical.

What does a multi-system approach actually mean?

Reading is not one skill. It leans on language, attention, working memory, and processing speed at the same time, with sound-to-letter processing at the root. A multi-system approach teaches across phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension instead of drilling one piece and hoping the rest follows.

How do I know if my child needs a formal evaluation?

If you sense a reading struggle, a parent screener is a reasonable starting point, not a diagnosis. If your child might need formal accommodations such as an IEP or 504 plan, or you suspect a vision, hearing, or medical cause, pursue a professional evaluation too, since that is the only route to those supports. The two paths work together.

Is it too late if my child is older?

Later is harder than early, but the brain stays adaptable well beyond the early grades. Imaging and intervention studies show older struggling readers still build reading pathways with consistent, well-matched practice. The right method at any age beats the wrong method started young.