If your assessment report mentions a Specific Learning Disorder with impairment in written expression, or you’re trying to work out whether that label fits what you’ve been noticing, this guide is here to make the diagnosis make sense. We’ll walk through what it actually means, how an evaluator decides it applies, which parts of a report point toward it, and the kinds of support that tend to help. You may also have come across the word dysgraphia. It’s related, though it’s used in a looser way than you might expect, and we’ll explain how it connects.
Quick Answer
A Specific Learning Disorder with impairment in written expression means a person’s writing skills are well below what you’d expect for their age, in a lasting way that isn’t explained by something like limited schooling or a vision problem. It can affect spelling, the grammar and punctuation of what’s written, and the clarity and organization of written ideas, or any combination of these. No single score establishes it on its own. An evaluator reaches the diagnosis by weighing test results, history, and everyday impact together.
What’s Inside the Full Guide
- What this diagnosis actually means, and how it relates to the term dysgraphia
- How an evaluator decides it applies, including why no single score is enough
- The parts of a report that point toward it, described so they make sense whatever writing test was used
- What it can look like in everyday writing, at school, at work, and at home
- The supports that tend to help, and what they can and can’t change
- When a fuller evaluation is the right next step
- Answers to the questions families and adults ask most