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When ‘Careless Mistakes’ Aren’t: Dyscalculia, Math Anxiety, and Learning Strategies That Help

math anxiety and dyscalculia - math concepts

Math anxiety is a common and significant hurdle for many students, especially those with dyscalculia, a learning disability that interferes with math comprehension, computation, and other functions.

Though dyscalculia triggers math anxiety and real, detrimental learning consequences, teachers, parents, and even students with dyscalculia seldom fully understand the nature and breadth of the condition.

The truth is that dyscalculia is a collection of problems stemming from deficits related to several brain processes that compound to overwhelm and impair performance. When teachers understand the complexity of the dyscalculic experience,  they can begin to teach the subject in ways that make sense to the student (and benefit other students in class who struggle with math). With effective and appropriate strategies, teachers can make learning math a positive experience for all types of brains.

Signs & Symptoms of Dyscalculia

Dyscalculia – also known as “math dyslexia,” “math learning disorder,” “specific learning disability in mathematics” and many other names — is characterized by the following difficulties, which result in poor math performance and, often, math anxiety:

[Get This Free Download: Solutions for Common Learning Challenges]

Not all students with dyscalculia will exhibit these difficulties. Even so, dyscalculia goes beyond problems in math class. In fact, it’s best to think of dyscalculia as a syndrome — a collection of characteristics that result from deficits in brain processes involving perception, working memory, processing, and communication. Other frequently observed characteristics of dyscalculia syndrome include difficulty with:

Dyscalculia is not poor math performance due to inattention, illness, insufficient interest, educational gaps, poor instruction, or other environmental causes.

Understanding Dyscalculia: Common Challenges and Examples

All the above difficulties translate to unique challenges for individuals with dyscalculia.

In the classroom

Students with dyscalculia may make errors unconsciously that are misconstrued as carelessness, disinterest, and other negative responses. Their challenges are also often misinterpreted as symptoms of ADHD.

[Read: Developmental Dyscalculia – a New Understanding of Early Warning Signs]

Outside the Classroom

Dyscalculia and Math Anxiety: Teaching Strategies and Classroom Solutions

While dyscalculia presents differently in each individual, math anxiety is understandably ubiquitous. Anxiety is a natural consequence when we are unable to perform as needed or expected. Past negative experiences with math may lead students to predict that present and future instances with math will go badly. What’s more, anxiety might overwhelm the student’s mental bandwidth, making math even more daunting and compromising their ability to meet demands. They might want to avoid math altogether to avoid feeling stressed, frustrated, inadequate, embarrassed, and unsuccessful.

The most effective teaching strategies for dyscalculia emphasize math language fluency – multiple ways of understanding a quantitative idea — and positive learning experiences, which build confidence and deep understanding, and avoid triggering math anxiety.

Teaching Strategy #1: Implement a Universal Design for Learning (UDL)

UDL involves implementing information redundancy in instruction. With UDL, students are given opportunities to access, experience, and demonstrate concepts in a variety of ways (visual, auditory, and kinesthetic). Each student’s learning preference reflects their unique strengths to maximize learning outcomes. Instructional methods can include traditional sources (class lectures, projects, tests, etc.) or creative ways (anything from art presentations, creating videos, verbally presenting information, etc.)

UDL is in line with the “authentic assessment” approach, where the student is the teacher. Through authentic assessment, the student has the opportunity to achieve deep understanding and demonstrate mastery independently.

Teaching Strategy #2: Teach Math Like You Would a Foreign Language

Math is a universal language that should be taught with deliberate attention to symbols, patterns, words, frame, structure, and other parts of math. Make sure to teach and consistently review the following:

Charts are a great way to visually show mathematical ideas through several iterations and to improve fluency. This equivalent fractions poster (preview shown below, full version available at Dyscalculia.org) represents each concept in multiple forms: with coins, fractions, words, decimals, and percentages. Notice how the half dollar section includes images of the coin, its value as a fraction of a dollar (1/2), the fraction in written form (one half), as a decimal (0.50), and its monetary value ($0.50).

This decimal place value chart (preview below) is a visual tool depicting the language, framework, patterns, and relationships of the base ten  system. The  write-wipe chart organizes information by color and allows students to easily  interpret numbers, convert units, write decimals, and calculate percentages, without a calculator.

Other Math Teaching Strategies

How to Reduce Math Anxiety: Positive Teaching Strategies

Math Anxiety and Dyscalculia: Next Steps

The content for this article was derived from the ADDitude Expert Webinar “Quelling Math Anxiety: How to Identify and Effectively Teach Students with Dyscalculia” [Video Replay & Podcast #366] with Renee Hamilton-Newman, M.Ed., M.S.-Sp.Ed. which was broadcast live on August 3, 2021.


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Updated on July 3, 2024

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