When a student knows more than they can write
See why reading-load problems often turn into writing problems later in the same assignment.
Many parents feel confused when a child who used to seem fine with reading suddenly starts struggling in high school. Often, comprehension has not dropped overnight. The demands have changed. Texts are denser, assignments move faster, and students are expected to pull out meaning, organize ideas, and write about what they read with much less support.
Students are asked to hold more information in mind, track arguments, read between the lines, connect ideas across passages, and turn their understanding into written work. If comprehension, processing speed, or organization has been shaky for a while, high school is often where the gap becomes visible.
See why reading-load problems often turn into writing problems later in the same assignment.
Look at the wider pattern when school output does not match actual ability.
See how reading strain, fatigue, and written output often connect for older students.
An Academic Success Assessment can help you understand whether comprehension, writing, executive functioning, or confidence is driving the struggle most.