Why can reading comprehension drop in high school?
See how high school reading demands can make long-standing struggles feel much bigger.
By high school, dyslexia often affects much more than reading accuracy. Students may be dealing with slower reading, heavy writing demands, mental fatigue, weak confidence, and the emotional wear of working harder than peers just to keep up. Families often need support that looks at the whole academic picture, not just one isolated skill.
When a student is expending extra energy just to read, organize, and express ideas, everything can feel harder. That is why families often need support that addresses writing, planning, confidence, and real-world academic routines alongside reading-related needs.
See how high school reading demands can make long-standing struggles feel much bigger.
Look at what happens when the academic strain starts changing how a student sees themselves.
Look at how some families connect dyslexia-related needs with the funding question.
An Academic Success Assessment can help your family understand whether the biggest needs right now are reading, writing, confidence, executive functioning, or a layered combination that needs a more thoughtful plan.