Observe your child or ask your child’s teacher or in-home tutor how well your child is doing with school and homework. Professional tutors and teachers usually sense when the child has a learning problem. To help you in determining your child’s learning abilities, read the following symptoms of sensory integration problems, which Optimum Learning from Australia has provided in its free booklet for parents and educators.
- Short term memory problems
- Information goes in one ear and out the other
- Your child may not be able to remember more than one or two items from a list of four verbal instructions.
- Your child may have learned and understood tables one day, but totally forget them the next day.
- Poor reading comprehension
- Messy writing: while the attention is on what to write (auditory channel), there is no attention on how it looks (visual channel).
- Phonetic spelling: the attention is only on what it sounds like and not on what it looks like.
- A student may learn easier with the teacher whose teaching method matches the child’s learning style, such as visual or auditory. The child does not have to shift from one sensory channel to another to translate the lessons.
When the child has problems with left and right brain integration, the following behavioral signs are present:
- Poor reading skills: comprehension, accuracy, fluency, and speed may be all affected
- Reversals of “b” and “d,” numbers or “was” for “saw”
- Visual problems, as the left eye and the right eye do not communicate efficiently
- Poor eye-hand coordination
- Poor handwriting skills, i.e. capitals where they do not belong, letter size and spacing are irregular, and lines are often ignored, although these may have been pointed out to the child many times.
- Poor story writing skills, as creative ideas are processed in the right brain and grammar and punctuation are processed in the left brain
- Poor spelling: there may be reversals of letters in words, there is an extra letter, or a letter is missing (often an “n”, “r” or “l”). The child does not say the word while looking at a picture of a word. This is an example of a survival strategy used by children who can only use one side of the brain at a time.
- Exam blanks
If you or your child’s tutor or teacher observed many of these symptoms, then it is possible your child has a learning problem. Immediately consult a learning and child development specialist for correct diagnosis. Many special education schools can be trusted to help your child learn and develop the necessary skills for a healthy adult life.


