It has been presumed that children who reverse letters or words see them backwards. This is false. They have directional confusion. In the real world direction has no meaning. For example, a chair is a chair no matter which way it is placed. Changing direction does not change interpretation. In the world of language direction changes meaning. Connect the bottom of a chair and it looks like a "b". Turn it 180 degrees it becomes a "d", flip it upside down and it becomes a "q" and flip it again it becomes a "p". Thus, direction changes meaning. The difference between "was" and "saw" is direction.
Additional Info in This Category
- My Child Is Near-Sighted. Will Glasses Correct His/Her Learning Problem?
- My Child Loses His/Her Place. Is That Related to the Eyes?
- My Child Reverses Letters and Words. Does He See Backwards?
- Vision & Learning
- What Are the Other Visual Components Necessary for Academic Achievement?
- What Is the Relationship between Eye Muscle Problems and Learning?