30 July 2021

Hyperlexia

Zaila, who just finished eighth grade in her hometown, Harvey, La., showed a prowess for spelling at 10, when her father, who had been watching finals of the Scripps National Spelling Bee on ESPN, asked her how to spell the winning word: marocain.

Zaila spelled it perfectly. Then he asked her to spell the winning words going back to 1999. She spelled nearly all of them correctly and was able to tell him the books where she had seen them.

“He was a bit surprised by that,” Zaila said in an interview before the finals.

She also learned how to speed read and figured out that she could divide five-digit numbers by two-digit numbers in her head, a skill she said she had a hard time explaining.
Via KottkeHyperlexia was a new word for me.
Hyperlexia is a syndrome characterized by a child's precocious ability to read. It was initially identified by Norman E. Silberberg and Margaret C. Silberberg (1967), who defined it as the precocious ability to read words without prior training in learning to read, typically before the age of 5. They indicated that children with hyperlexia have a significantly higher word-decoding ability than their reading comprehension levels. Children with hyperlexia also present with an intense fascination for written material at a very early age.

Some hyperlexics, however, have trouble understanding speech. Some experts believe that most children with hyperlexia, or perhaps even all of them, lie on the autism spectrum. However, one expert, Darold Treffert, proposes that hyperlexia has subtypes, only some of which overlap with autism. Between 5 and 20 percent of autistic children have been estimated to be hyperlexic.
When I read about children like Zaila, I often wonder how many other children there are "out there" who are unrecognized in terms of their abilities.

3 comments:

  1. Evidently every kid who doesn’t fit preconceived notions and narrow molds, is now declared to be on the Autism Spectrum.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I was an obnoxious child who used to say that the only thing worth learning was how to read, and as I had already taught myself that before I got to school, my entire schooling was a complete waste of my time.

    ReplyDelete
  3. I taught myself when I was four. Once I figured out the song and the letters were referencing the same thing, there was no stopping me.

    ReplyDelete

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