TLDR Version

The data collected shows some very interesting and in some cases alarming statistics

  • About 85% are showing signs of Extreme Anxiety. This is very alarming. If a child is experiencing anxiety learning anything is nearly impossible. If, on the other hand, confidence is high, children operate at peak performance and don’t give up until they master what they set out to do.  There are well-established methods of reducing anxiety and building confidence. So there is no need for children to experience this fear state. Unfortunately, the data seems to point to this anxiety being overlooked as a part of the problem and eliminating it as a part of the solution.
  • It appears that a majority of those with reading difficulties may have problems that at least in part, root in visual-kinesthetic skills.
  • 58% of the subjects were girls. This is surprising because statistics show 80% of dyslexics to be boys. There could be a variety of reasons for this but the numbers are brow raising
  • Proprioception difficulties correlate with reading struggles. Actually, this is not surprising at all. We’ve known this for decades and fortunately, neuroscience has recently caught up with our discovery. 

 

About The Data

All data were collected through our Online Dyslexia Screener.  This online questionnaire asks parents about their children’s quality of reading, emotional responses, self-esteem, as well as other possible indicators of dyslexia. Parents are then instantly emailed a full report based upon their responses. The report is designed to lead them to understand what may be causing their child’s reading difficulty and possible solutions. Solutions include strategies for eliminating negative emotions and anxiety as we have found that these exist in the majority of children suffering from reading struggles.

There were 1050 respondents in total. Respondents came in majority from online searches. Most for terms such as “dyslexia test”. Others had searched on terms related to reading difficulties. A minority of respondents came from social media with the bulk of those from Pinterest. Many had searched on Pinterest for the term “dyslexia Test” or similar. A smaller minority came from other social media such as Facebook and Twitter.

We do not know if the respondents were dyslexic or not. We do know that they are having reading difficulty. The term dyslexia has a lot of semantic problems. What is important to us is how we can help those with reading difficulties and we do not wish to get into arguments about what is “truly dyslexia”. 

All information is anonymized. After the report is emailed to the parent the personal data is removed from the server where the data is collected. We are only presenting statistical data here and do not retain the reports emailed to parents.

The ages of the participants vary.

2.4% of respondent had children who were 5 or under. At this age, it is likely that the problems experienced are not problems at all but merely the child not reaching a necessary level of development.

The instructions clearly state that the screener is designed for children but from the responses, we can see that 24.6% of respondents were 18 or over.

These facts will clearly skew the results to some unknown degree. However, we believe that the statistics are still extremely telling.

We can also see that if we exclude the over 18 respondents the mode is at age 7. This makes sense as this is a typical age where signs of a specific reading disability will typically begin to be noticed. 449 respondents were 13 plus leaving 600, or 57.2%,  in the 12 and under group