Note:
This fact
sheet about dysgraphia is published by the International
Dyslexia Association (IDA). IDA encourages the reproduction and distribution
of fact sheets. If portions of the text are cited, appropriate reference
must be made. Fact sheets may not be reprinted for the purpose of resale.
What
is dysgraphia?
What causes dysgraphia?
Does dysgraphia occur alone or with other specific learning disabilities?
Why is the diagnosis of dysgraphia and related learning disabilities important?
What kinds of instructional activities improve the handwriting of children with dysgraphia?
Do Children with dysgraphia make reversals or other letter production errors?
What kind of instructional strategies improve spelling of children with dysgraphia?
Are educators in public schools identifying children with dysgraphia and providing appropriate instruction in public schools?
Are there research-supported assessment tools for diagnosing dysgraphia?
What causes dysgraphia?
Does dysgraphia occur alone or with other specific learning disabilities?
Why is the diagnosis of dysgraphia and related learning disabilities important?
What kinds of instructional activities improve the handwriting of children with dysgraphia?
Do Children with dysgraphia make reversals or other letter production errors?
What kind of instructional strategies improve spelling of children with dysgraphia?
Are educators in public schools identifying children with dysgraphia and providing appropriate instruction in public schools?
Are there research-supported assessment tools for diagnosing dysgraphia?
Dysgraphia
is a specific learning disability that affects how easily children
acquire written language and how well they use written language to
express their thoughts.
Dysgraphia
is a Greek word. The base word graph refers both to the hand’s function
in writing and to the letters formed by the hand. The prefix dys
indicates that there is impairment. Graph refers to producing letter
forms by hand. The suffix ia refers to having a condition. Thus,
dysgraphia is the condition of impaired letter writing by hand, that is,
disabled handwriting and sometimes spelling. Impaired handwriting can
interfere with learning to spell words in writing. Occasionally, but not
very often, children have just spelling problems and not handwriting or
reading problems.
Research
to date has shown orthographic coding in working memory is related to
handwriting. Orthographic coding refers to the ability to store
unfamiliar written words in working memory while the letters in the word
are analyzed during word learning or the ability to create permanent
memory of written words linked to their pronunciation and meaning.
Children with dysgraphia do not have primary developmental motor
disorder, another cause of poor handwriting, but they may have
difficulty planning sequential finger movements such as the touching of
the thumb to successive fingers on the same hand.
Children
with impaired handwriting may also have attention-deficit disorder
(ADHD)—inattentive, hyperactive, or combined inattentive and hyperactive
subtypes. Children with this kind of dysgraphia may respond to a
combination of explicit handwriting instruction plus stimulant
medication, but appropriate diagnosis of ADHD by a qualified
professional and monitoring of response to both instruction and
medication are needed
Dysgraphia
may occur alone or with dyslexia (impaired reading disability) or with
oral and written language learning disability (OWL LD, also referred to
as selective language impairment, SLI).
Dyslexia
is a disorder that includes poor word reading, word decoding, oral
reading fluency, and spelling. Children with dyslexia may have impaired
orthographic and phonological coding and rapid automatic naming and
switching. Phonological coding refers to coding sounds in spoken words
in working memory. Phonological coding is necessary for developing
phonological awareness—analyzing the sounds in spoken words that
correspond to alphabet letters. If children have both dysgraphia and
dyslexia, they may also have difficulty in planning sequential finger
movements.
OWL
LD (SLI) are disorders of language (morphology—word parts that mark
meaning and grammar; syntax—structures for ordering words and
understanding word functions; finding words in memory, and/or making
inferences that go beyond what is stated in text). These disorders
affect spoken as well as written language. Children with these language
disorders may also exhibit the same writing and reading and related
disorders as children with dysgraphia or dyslexia.
Without
diagnosis, children may not receive early intervention or specialized
instruction in all the relevant skills that are interfering with
their learning of written language. Considering that many schools do not
have systematic instructional programs in handwriting and spelling, it
is important to assess whether children need explicit, systematic
instruction in handwriting and spelling in addition to word reading and
decoding. Many schools offer accommodations in testing and teaching to
students with dysgraphia, but these students also need ongoing, explicit
instruction in handwriting, spelling, and composition. It is also
important to determine if a child with dysgraphia may also have dyslexia
and require special help with reading or OWL LD (SLI) and need special
help with oral as well as written language. .
Initially, children with impaired handwriting benefit from activities that support learning to form letters:
- playing with clay to strengthen hand muscles;
- keeping lines within mazes to develop motor control;
- connecting dots or dashes to create complete letter forms;
- tracing letters with index finger or eraser end of pencil;
- imitating the teacher modeling sequential strokes in letter formation; and
- copying letters from models.
Subsequently,
once children learn to form legible letters, they benefit from
instruction that helps them develop automatic letter writing, using the
following steps to practice each of the 26 letters of the alphabet in a
different order daily:
- studying numbered arrow cues that provide a consistent plan for letter formation;
- covering the letter with a 3 x 5 card and imaging the letter in the mind’s eye;
- writing the letter from memory after interval that increases in duration over the handwriting lessons;
- writing letters from dictation (spoken name to letter form); and
- writing letters during composing for 5 minutes on a teacher-provided topic.
Students benefit from explicit instruction in spelling throughout K–12:
- initially in high frequency Anglo-Saxon words;
- subsequently in coordinating the phonological, orthographic, and morphological processes relevant for the spelling of longer, more complex, less frequent words; and
- at all grade levels in the most common and important words used for the different academic domains of the curriculum.
Throughout K-12, students benefit from strategies for composing:
- planning, generating, reviewing/evaluating, and revising compositions of different genre including narrative, informational, compare and contrast, and persuasive; and
- self-regulation strategies for managing the complex executive functions involved in composing.
Some
children do make reversals (reversing direction letter faces along a
vertical axis), inversions (flipping letters along a horizontal axis so
that the letter is upside down), or transpositions (sequence of letters
in a word is out of order). These errors are symptoms rather than causes
of handwriting problems. The automatic letter writing instruction
described earlier has been shown to reduce reversals, which are less
likely to occur when retrieval of letters from memory and production of
letters have become automatic.
If
children have both handwriting and spelling problems, the kinds of
handwriting instruction described earlier should be included along with
the spelling instruction.
Are educators in public schools identifying children with dysgraphia and providing appropriate instruction in public schools?
In
general, no. Although federal law specifies written expression as one
of the areas in which students with learning disabilities may be
affected, it does not clearly identify the transcription problems that
are the causal factors in dysgraphia—impaired handwriting and/or
spelling—for impaired written expression of ideas. Some of the tests
used to assess written expression are not scored for handwriting or
spelling problems and mask the nature of the disability in dysgraphia.
Content or ideas may not be impaired. All too often, the poor writing or
failure to complete writing assignments in a timely fashion or at all
is misattributed to lack of motivation, laziness, or other issues
unrelated to the real culprit—dysgraphia. Children who are twice
exceptional—gifted and dysgraphic—are especially under-diagnosed and
underserved. Teachers mistakenly assume that if a student is bright and
cannot write it is because the student is not trying.
Yes.
See Berninger (2007a) and Milone (2007) below for assessing handwriting
problems associated with dysgraphia. Also, see Berninger (2007b) and
Berninger, O’Donnell, and Holdnack (2008) for using these tests and
other evidence-based assessment procedures in early identification,
prevention, and diagnosis for treatment planning and linking them to
evidence-based handwriting and spelling instruction (also see Troia,
2008).
In
summary, dysgraphia is a specific learning disability that can be
diagnosed and treated. Children with dysgraphia usually have other
problems such as difficulty with spelling and written expression, as
well as dyslexia and, in some cases, oral language problems. It is
important that a thorough assessment of handwriting and related skill
areas be carried out in order to plan specialized instruction in all
deficient skills that may be interfering with a student’s learning of
written language. For example, a student may need instruction in both
handwriting and oral language skills to improve written expression.
Although early intervention is, of course, desirable, it is never too
late to intervene to improve a student’s deficient skills and provide
appropriate accommodations.
Note:
The International Dyslexia Association (IDA) thanks Virginia
W. Berninger, Ph.D., for her assistance in the preparation of this fact
sheet.
References
Berninger,
V. (2007a). Process Assessment of the Learner, 2nd Edition. Diagnostic
for Reading and Writing (PAL-II RW). San Antonio, TX: The Psychological
Corporation.
Berninger,
V. (2007b). Process Assessment of the Learner II User’s Guide. San
Antonio, TX: Harcourt/PsyCorp. (CD format) ISBN 0158661818. Second
Edition issued August, 2008.
Berninger,
V. (2007). Evidence-based written language instruction during early and
middle childhood. In R. Morris & N. Mather (Eds.), Evidence-based
interventions for students with learning and behavioral challenges.
Philadelphia: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.
Berninger,
V., O’Donnell, L., & Holdnack, J. (2008). Research-supported
differential diagnosis of specific learning disabilities and
implications for instruction and response to instruction (RTI). In A.
Prifitera, D.Saklofske, & L. Weiss (Eds.), WISC-IV Clinical
Assessment and Intervention, Second Edition (pp. 69–108). San Diego, CA:
Academic Press (Elsevier).
Berninger,
V., & Wolf, B. (in press-a). Teaching students with dyslexia and
dysgraphia: Lessons from teaching and science. Baltimore: Paul H.
Brookes.
Berninger,
V., & Wolf, B. (in press-b). Helping students with dyslexia and
dysgraphia make connections: Differentiated instruction lesson plans in
reading and writing. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes. [Spiral-bound book with
teaching plans from University of Washington Research Program.]
Graham,
S., Harris, K., & Loynachan, C. (1994). The spelling for writing
list. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 27, 210–214.
Henry, M. (2003). Unlocking literacy. Effective decoding and spelling instruction. Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes Publishing.
Milone, M. (2007). Test of Handwriting Skills-Revised. Novato, CA: Academic Therapy. Distributed by ProEd, Austin, TX.
Moats,
L. C. (Winter, 2005/2006). How spelling supports reading: And why it is
more regular and predictable than you think. American Educator, 12–22,
42–43.
Troia, G. (Ed.). (2008). Instruction and assessment for struggling writers: Evidence-based practices. New York: Guilford.
Yates,
C., Berninger, V., & Abbott, R. (1994). Writing problems in
intellectually gifted children. Journal for the Education of the Gifted,
18, 131–155.
©
Copyright 2009, The International Dyslexia Association (IDA).
Published by the IDA Information Services Committee.
IDA encourages the reproduction and distribution of this fact
sheet. If portions of the text are cited, appropriate reference must be
made.
Fact sheets may not be reprinted for the purpose of resale. Fact sheet revised December 2008.
URL:
http://www.interdys.org/ewebeditpro5/upload/Understanding_Dysgraphia_Fact_Sheet_12-01-08.pdf
Fact sheets may not be reprinted for the purpose of resale. Fact sheet revised December 2008.
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