What Are 3 Conditions Associated with Learning Disabilities?

Learning Disability Symptom Checker

This tool helps identify potential indicators of common learning disabilities. Answer the questions honestly to see which condition’s symptoms align most closely with your experiences. Note: This is not a diagnostic tool. Professional evaluation is required for official diagnosis.

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5 Dyscalculia Myths to Correct

Many myths surround dyscalculia that cause delays in ensuring children receive the right support. Here are the 5 myths about dyscalculia you may have heard.

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How autism, ADHD and dyscalculia shape my social work practice

A social worker with autism, ADHD, and dyscalculia reflects on the challenges of disclosure, how her neurodivergence shapes practice with families and colleagues, and why social work education must change how it views difference

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Teachers’ Self-Efficacy in Dyscalculia: Development and Psychometric Validation of a New Scale

The aim of this study is to develop a valid and reliable scale for measuring the self-efficacy of primary school and mathematics teachers regarding dyscalculia. Grounded in Bandura’s Social Cognitive Theory, the study followed established scale development procedures. In the initial phase, a pool of 42 items was generated to assess teachers’ self-efficacy regarding dyscalculia. The items were reviewed by a panel of seven experts in the fields of psychometrics, mathematics education, special education, and psychology to ensure content validity. Based on expert evaluations, four items were removed due to overly technical phrasing that could lead to misinterpretation, reducing the pool to 38 items. Subsequently, Exploratory Factor Analysis (EFA) conducted with 273 teachers indicated that four additional items exhibited inadequate factor loadings or problematic cross-loadings; these items were also excluded. The resulting Dyscalculia Self-Efficacy Scale (DSES) comprises 34 items organized into four factors: “Dyscalculia Symptoms”, “Providing Psychological Support to Children with Dyscalculia”, “Diagnosing Dyscalculia”, “Providing Support in the Teaching Process”. Confirmatory Factor Analysis conducted with a separate sample of 242 teachers yielded strong model fit indices, supporting the construct validity of the scale. The overall scale demonstrated high internal consistency (Cronbach’s α = 0.980, McDonald’s ω = 0.980). Correlation analyses with established instruments provided evidence of convergent and discriminant validity. The findings indicate that the DSES is a valid and reliable instrument for assessing teachers’ self-efficacy regarding dyscalculia.

See the full study HERE