Dean Geyer, who is a parent of a child who had difficulty learning to read, has launched a blog entitled “Hey, Teacher, My Child Can’t Read.” His daughter’s experience is, in part, a success story; after five years of special education in Delaware (US), he reports that she is on the honor roll and no longer eligible for special education.
In his entries, Mr. Geyer frequently refers to “auditory processing disorder.” Although I am very glad to learn that Mr. Geyer’s daughter is succeeding, I am wary of attributing much to the diagnosis of auditory processing disorder. I’ve been hearing about this disorder for most of my career, but I have as yet not found a satisfactorily rigorous or substantiated account of it.
If someone could point me to a definitive resource on this disorder, we could examine it systematically. I fear, however, that a close examination of the resource will reveal that it is simply hypothesizing some hidden process that can’t be precisely tested and is pretty readily reduced to not having learned some pretty specific skills.
Here are some of the questions one should ask:
- How does one distinguish a child with auditory processing disorder from another child who doesn’t have the disorder?
- How trustworthy (psychometrically sound) are any instruments used in making the diagnosis of auditory processing disorder?
- What specific tasks would a child with auditory processing disorder fail? If the child was taught how to pass those tasks, would she still have auditory processing disorder?
By the way, I think there’s a similar case to be made for “non-verbal learning disability.”
Regardless of the outcomes of an investigation of auditory processing disorder, it’s still quite wonderful to know that Mr. Geyer’s daughter is succeeding. I encourage readers to jump over to Hey, Teacher, My Child Can’t Read and read his posts. I’m adding his site to LD Blog’s blog roll.
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Hi John,
I enjoyed reading your post. It is not often these days that anyone takes time to actually think about what they have read or heard on the streets or online. I appreciate your frankness. You have raised some interesting questions about auditory processing disorder and the diagnosis of it. So, now you’ve got my curiousity fired up!!
I have started a podcast series (http://deangeyer.podomatic.com) about reading difficulties. I have interviewed my daughter and also her reading specialist. I will be contacting the reading specialist this week to see if I can get some answers to the points you have raised for another podcast. Should be pretty interesting.
Contact me if you have any other burning questions. I am adding LD Blog to my blogroll. Dean Geyer