This section contains further information regarding dyscalculia. It is divided into:
Dyscalculia Websites: For further information and resources
Further Reading: Downloadable PDFs
Dyscalculia Professional Development: Courses & Webinars
Talking to Students about Dyscalculia: Useful Books and Stories
Dyscalculia Websites
The buttons for each website link you directly to them.
Understood.org contains a lot of useful information for parents and teachers on how to understand and support children with dyscalculia. The button will take you to an introduction of what dyscalculia is.
Ronit Bird is an expert on dyscalculia. Her website contains a lot of useful information and resources.
Steve Chinn is another expert on dyscalculia. His website also contains a lot of useful information and resources.
dyscalculia.me contains further information on dyscalculia as well as useful tips and resources.
The Dyscalculia Network contains a lot information on dyscalculia and maths anxiety as well as useful tips and resources.
Dyscalculia: Further Reading
Click on the top right corner to download PDFs.
Dyscalculia: Professional Development
The SEND Group offers a course called 'Dyscalculia and Mathematical Learning Difficulties: Identification and Intervention'. Steve Chinn is one of the tutors for the course.
Jo Boaler is a maths specialist. While her online courses are not about dyscalculia, she offers two courses about how to teach maths and another on mathematical mindsets. They are well-structured and provide a lot of practical strategies on how to teach maths.
Ronit Bird: Dyscalculia - A Parent's Guide
Ronit Bird has made a video guide for parents. It is a useful summary.
Ronit Bird has a YouTube channel with many videos on dyscalculia and strategies to support students. Click the picture to access the channel.
Talking to Students about Dyscalculia
Some suggetsed books to discuss Dyscalculia with students.
Being a new student at school can be a big deal even when you are in kindergarten. It’s Cassidy’s first day at a new school and she is a little nervous. Will she be able to keep up with her classmates or will her learning disability get in her way? Follow her first few days as she finds her confidence and voice in kindergarten.
You can also watch this book being read on YouTube. (The image is a bit blurry but the reading voice is clear.
In this beautiful and chilling memoir, twenty-five-year-old Samantha Abeel describes her struggles with a math-related learning disability, and how it forced her to find inner strength and courage. Samantha Abeel couldn't tell time, remember her locker combination, or count out change at a checkout counter -- and she was in seventh grade. For a straight-A student like Samantha, problems like these made no sense. She dreaded school, and began having anxiety attacks. In her thirteenth winter, she found the courage to confront her problems -- and was diagnosed with a learning disability. Slowly, Samantha's life began to change again. She discovered that she was stronger than she'd ever thought possible -- and that sometimes, when things look bleakest, hope is closer than you think.
Did you ever wake up to one of those days where everything is a problem? You have 10 things to do, but only 30 minutes until your bus leaves. Is there enough time? You have 3 shirts and 2 pairs of pants. Can you make 1 good outfit? Then you start to wonder: Why does everything have to be such a problem? Why do 2 apples always have to be added to 5 oranges? Why do 4 kids always have to divide 12 marbles? Why can't you just keep 10 cookies without someone taking 3 away? Why? Because you're the victim of a Math Curse. That's why. But don't despair. This is one girl's story of how that curse can be broken.