Staring at your child’s dyslexia evaluation results can feel like trying to decode a foreign language filled with technical terms, numbers, and recommendations that seem to speak more about limitations than possibilities. You might find yourself wondering what phrases like “processing deficit” or “significant discrepancy” actually mean for your child’s daily life, or feeling overwhelmed by percentile scores that seem to reduce your child’s unique capabilities to cold statistics. The mix of relief from finally having answers and worry about what comes next is completely understandable – these results hold the key to unlocking your child’s potential, but first you need to understand what they’re really telling you.
Understanding What Your Child’s Assessment Actually Measured
When you receive your child’s evaluation results, you’re looking at much more than just a reading test. A comprehensive dyslexia evaluation examines multiple areas of brain processing to understand exactly which skills need development. The assessment typically measures cognitive processing skills like visual discrimination, auditory processing, working memory, and phonological awareness. Each of these processing areas plays a crucial role in reading development.
Think of your child’s brain as having different departments that need to work together for reading success. The evaluation identifies which departments are working well and which ones need some extra support. For example, if the results show challenges with visual discrimination, your child might struggle to distinguish between similar-looking letters like ‘b’ and ‘d’. If auditory memory is an area of need, they might have trouble remembering multi-step instructions or sound sequences.
The key insight here is that these results don’t define your child’s intelligence or potential. Instead, they reveal specific processing skills that can be strengthened through targeted intervention. Modern neuroscience shows us that the brain can literally rewire itself when we provide the right kind of practice – a concept called neuroplasticity.
Evaluation reports often contain numbers that can feel overwhelming at first glance. Standard scores, percentiles, and terms like “significant discrepancy” might seem confusing, but they’re actually telling a clear story about your child’s learning profile. A standard score of 100 is considered average, with most children scoring between 85 and 115. Percentiles tell you how your child performed compared to other children their age – a 25th percentile score means your child scored better than 25% of children their age.
When evaluators mention “significant discrepancy,” they’re identifying areas where your child’s performance differs notably from what would be expected based on their overall cognitive ability. This is actually good news because it pinpoints exactly where intervention should focus. Rather than vague concerns about reading, you now have specific targets for improvement.
The severity levels in the report – whether described as mild, moderate, or severe – indicate how much support your child will need, not their capacity to improve. Children with more significant challenges often make remarkable progress when they receive appropriate intervention that targets their specific processing skill gaps. The Brain Bloom System, for instance, is designed to strengthen these foundational processing skills systematically.
Author Quote"
The key insight here is that these results don’t define your child’s intelligence or potential.
"
Recognizing Your Child’s Strengths Within the Results
One of the most important aspects of understanding evaluation results is recognizing that they reveal both challenges and capabilities. Many children with dyslexia show strong performance in areas like reasoning, creativity, or spatial reasoning. These strengths aren’t consolation prizes – they’re the foundation for building reading skills and academic success.
Your child’s evaluation likely shows a spiky profile, with some areas scoring well above average while others need development. This is completely normal for children with dyslexia and actually provides valuable information about how to approach intervention. Strong areas can support weaker ones during the learning process.
For example, if your child shows strong visual-spatial skills but struggles with phonological awareness, intervention programs can use visual strategies to teach sound-symbol relationships. The goal isn’t to focus solely on weaknesses but to build a bridge from strengths to areas that need development. This approach maintains your child’s confidence while systematically building the skills they need.
Key Takeaways:
1
Comprehensive Assessment: Dyslexia evaluations measure multiple brain processing areas, not just reading, to identify specific skills that need development.
2
Scores Tell a Story: Standard scores and percentiles reveal your child's learning profile and pinpoint exactly where targeted intervention should focus.
3
Results Guide Action: Evaluation findings should directly inform which specific interventions will be most effective for your child's unique processing needs.
Translating Results into Effective Action Steps
The most valuable part of any evaluation is how it guides your next steps. The results should directly inform which interventions will be most effective for your child’s specific profile. If the evaluation identifies auditory processing challenges, programs like The Attentive Ear Auditory Processing Program can target these skills directly. If visual processing is the primary concern, activities that strengthen visual memory and visual tracking become priorities.
Understanding that reading difficulties stem from specific, treatable processing skill gaps changes everything about how you approach intervention. Instead of general reading help, your child can receive targeted support that addresses root causes. This is why children who receive intervention based on their evaluation results often make much faster progress than those who receive generic reading support.
Schools should use evaluation results to develop appropriate accommodations and instructional strategies. If your child needs extra time for processing or benefits from multisensory instruction, these supports should be clearly outlined in their educational plan. The evaluation results give you the evidence you need to advocate for appropriate services that match your child’s learning profile.
To help your child develop a stronger growth mindset, consider our free course that teaches both parents and children how to embrace challenges and view mistakes as learning opportunities. Explore our growth mindset course.
Remember that evaluation results represent a snapshot of current skill development, not fixed limitations. With appropriate intervention that targets the specific processing skills identified in the evaluation, children regularly exceed initial predictions. The brain’s ability to develop new pathways means that today’s challenges can become tomorrow’s strengths when we provide the right kind of systematic practice.
Author Quote"
With appropriate intervention that targets the specific processing skills identified in the evaluation, children regularly exceed initial predictions.
"
Confusing evaluation results that leave parents feeling lost and uncertain about their child’s future steal precious time when targeted intervention could be making a real difference. As your child’s first and most important teacher, you have the power to transform those overwhelming test scores into a clear action plan that builds the specific processing skills your child needs. You know your child’s heart, their dreams, and their unique way of seeing the world – and now you can combine that insight with targeted skill development that actually changes how their brain processes information. The Learning Success All Access Program provides the systematic, science-based tools you need to strengthen the exact processing skills identified in your child’s evaluation, turning today’s challenges into tomorrow’s capabilities. Start your free trial today at https://learningsuccess.ai/membership/all-access/ and begin building the specific skills that will unlock your child’s reading potential.
Is Your Child Struggling in School?
Get Your FREE Personalized Learning Roadmap
Comprehensive assessment + instant access to research-backed strategies