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No best answer has yet been selected by museumgal. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Unfortuntely dyslexia is often played down or passed over in many primary schools in the UK; I know from bitter experience, and struggled for a very long time to get help for my son. Are there other males in the family with dyslexia (father, uncle, grandfather) as it is more come in males and tends to be hereditary.
The best thing to do is get as much information on the subject; Jules001 has given the details of the BDA which is an excellent place to start.
http://www.dyslexia-inst.org.uk/ is another site to look at as is-
http://www.dyslexic.com/home.php?PHPSESSID=23a879170a1d332e6dcfebdfad4af497 this one has a forum too.
You may also find there is a local or regional help group in your area.
Good luck.
I�m dyslexic - and primary school was not much fun, I would be very surprised if his teachers had noticed or cared that he was struggling. You really need to cut them out the loop as much as possible in my opinion � from the ages of about 9 � 12 I went to a Saturday school (only for about 3 hours) where one-to-one tuition was used and a much more effective (at least for dyslexics) style of teaching was implemented. Though I objected at first I was pleased with the results and it was these few hours a week that actually taught be how to read and write rather than the years previously sitting in a class room being confused, also it was a great confidence boost to be able to learn in an environment where it ok to be wrong and there is no embarrassment in making mistakes.