Dyslexia in the Context of Social Work: Screening and Early Intervention

Author:

Schelbe Lisa1ORCID,Pryce Jessica2,Petscher Yaacov3,Fien Hank4,Stanley Christopher5,Gearin Brian6,Gaab Nadine7

Affiliation:

1. PhD, MSW, associate professor, Florida State University, Tallahassee, USA

2. PhD, MSW, assistant professor, Florida State University, Tallahassee, USA

3. PhD, professor, Florida State University; director, Quantitative Methodology and Innovation Division, Florida Center for Reading Research; associate director, Florida Center for Reading Research; deputy director, National Comprehensive Center to Improve Literacy for Students with Disabilities, Tallahassee, USA

4. PhD, director, Center on Teaching and Learning, University of Oregon, Eugene, USA

5. PhD, associate professor in Research, Florida Center for Reading Research Florida State University, Tallahassee, USA

6. PhD, research associate, Center on Teaching and Learning, University of Oregon, Eugene, USA

7. PhD, associate professor of Education, Harvard Graduate School of Education, Cambridge, MA, USA

Abstract

Dyslexia, the most common learning disability, is associated with poor academic, economic, vocational, and health outcomes. Disproportionately, dyslexia is undiagnosed and untreated in children who are Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) or who live in poverty. Early identification of and subsequent interventions for children at risk for dyslexia can effectively mitigate poor outcomes. While screening and interventions largely occur in schools, social workers across practice contexts have responsibilities to address dyslexia: identifying, referring, educating, and advocating. Social workers should address dyslexia to promote equity and improve quality of life and various outcomes across the life course. This article describes dyslexia, early screening, and interventions; dyslexia as a social justice issue; and social workers’ roles in addressing dyslexia.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

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