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An ADHD and Dyslexia Success Story

Le Roux was diagnosed with ADHD and dyslexia. Berna Spies shares her son’s success after he joined Edublox. His reading improved by two year levels, and his math mark increased by 30 percent.

Diagnosed with ADHD and dyslexia

Le Roux was diagnosed with ADHD in preschool. After much contemplation, we put him on a schedule 4 medication. We accepted that school might be tough for him, given that he has ADHD and that he might find learning a bit more difficult than other kids.

However, it was more than that. In Grade 2, he was diagnosed with dyslexia – a devastating blow. It impacted his self-confidence and caused a lot of anxiety for us as parents because we did not know how to help him.

No help afforded

We had him tested to make sure we were not missing anything. His hearing was normal. The EEG was normal. We did a Colorimetry Test and bought special glasses with colored lenses, which did help the letters to stand still; however, he still needed to know the letters he was looking at.

There were reading centers and special computer programs. You name it, we tried it. Ultimately, we were met with many shrugged shoulders and shaking heads. No light bulb moment or magic cure that would help my son reach his full potential! I felt deflated as I could see him falling further and further behind on his reading and spelling.

Positive child becomes shy and unsure

Le Roux is one of those kids who does not understand what it means to be shy. Whatever the heart is full of comes out of his mouth with no filter. He is vibrant, funny, and adventurous. He makes friends within minutes of meeting people. He is creative and embraces the fact that he has ADHD. He accepted that he needed medication for school but fully enjoyed being his rambunctious self over weekends.

There is a positive side to ADHD. He will always be the one thinking outside the box, and his level of creativity is off the charts. He could, however, not understand why reading and spelling were so incredibly hard for him.

It was heartbreaking to see this boy become a shy, unsure child when it came to schoolwork. At the time, at that age, he still had to get up in class daily and read out loud in front of everyone or have classmates mark his spelling tests. It was rough.

Google provides an answer

One evening, while sitting in front of my laptop, with my fingers on the keys, I wished to come up with the right question I could Google that would give me the answer I had long been looking for: How can I help my son? I asked what would happen to someone who has dyslexia.

I wanted to know where he would fit into society. I wanted to understand how I could help him now to prepare him for one day. The first search that popped up was Edublox. I started reading the testimonials and felt like I was reading our own story. I was even more hopeful when I saw there was an Edublox a couple of blocks from my office. At the time, I was working in George and living in Mossel Bay.

Not convinced

To be honest, my husband was not at all on board with trying out yet another ‘gimmick’ that costs a lot of money. What will make this any different? Le Roux would be put through yet another process, but we always ended up right where we had started.

I made an appointment with Karen at Edublox George in February 2017. Le Roux has just started Grade 5. When I came in for the feedback after the evaluation, nothing Karen told me was new, and before I knew it, I had lost my composure and started to cry.

She asked me why I was crying. I said because I was hoping for something new that no one else noticed, and maybe that was the magic ‘on’ button we needed to find. Karen then told me that she was not yet finished with her feedback; I had not given her a chance to tell me that she could help him and that we could do something about this. That we could get Le Roux to read and spell, and this would happen with a lot of hard work, patience, and time.

Since then, the journey has been incredible. We have to travel 44 km both ways to be at the classes, but it is worth it. Le Roux has shown great improvement and has grown tremendously in confidence when it comes to reading. It was also important for him to meet kids with similar learning difficulties to make him understand that he is not the only one and that he is normal — just like the other kids he met at Edublox.

Reading and spelling improve

When we started the program, Le Roux was barely reading at Grade 3 level. At the beginning of 2018, he was reading at Grade 5 level. His reading has improved tremendously; almost seemed fluent compared to the spitting and stuttering we were used to. Before, he needed to sound out each word, mostly incorrectly, and by the time we finished a sentence, neither of us could remember what the sentence was about. Comprehension tests, composition, etc., were pure torture.

Although he attends Afrikaans classes, his English has also enjoyed improvement. Before, he could not read English at all! It was a completely foreign language to him — I had to tell him each word. Practicing and practicing the same piece would not bring improvement either.

I remember one evening, close to the end of last year when he had to practice prepared reading for English. I asked him to sit and read to his dad. When he started, reading it for the first time, and it was going off with almost no hitches, my husband’s face lit up. He looked at me in amazement. It was a moment I will never forget because that was the moment we both acknowledged that this program is different. It works!

Spelling has also improved. Before, we could practice the same simple 20 words over and over, yet he would still get no more than four correct out of a possible 20. Now, with enough practice, he can get up to 15 difficult words correct out of a possible 25.

Vast improvement in mathematics

Another area where we have experienced a vast improvement was mathematics. I met with his math teacher early this year to discuss his marks. I found that he did not need help with math homework; he knew his work very well and was really enjoying his new teacher. He had the confidence to ask if he did not understand, whereas before, he would be dubbed the ADHD kid who does not pay attention.

All of a sudden, math was no longer complicated. However, he still did not do well in tests and scored in the 50% range. I explained to her that ADHD and dyslexia made it difficult for him to switch between the different types of math problems; this caused him to get lost in the reading if he did not have context. However, he always knew what kind of math problem he was dealing with in class. In a test paper, they would switch between types of math problems, and that confused him.

She noted that and decided to place a heading above each section in the exam paper, thus providing context, which helped him shift gears and focus on that specific type of problem. It made a huge difference! Le Roux’s math marks increased by 30% from the first quarter to the third quarter of this year.

Not done yet

Spelling remains an area where Le Roux needs more improvement. Despite being a very colorful storyteller, he will simplify the story as far as possible to simplify the words and make writing the story easier.

He still sometimes loses context when reading exam questions — when the question is tricky. He will either need help understanding the question or miss the hidden meaning. He will know the answer immediately if you read it to him.

English remains a problem when it comes to spelling, grammar, etc. We will only be able to tackle this once Afrikaans is on par, but in the meantime, he requires a lot of help with English homework.

Berna Spies


Le Roux’s school reports:

An amazing improvement. His math mark improved by 30%!

Edublox offers cognitive training and live online tutoring to students with dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyscalculia, and other learning disabilities. Our students are in the United States, Canada, Australia, and elsewhere. Book a free consultation to discuss your child’s learning needs.