
Signs of Dyslexia in a 7-Year-Old: What to Look For and What to Do
It is reading night in your house. Your seven-year-old is sitting at the kitchen table, and every word on the
Proudly serving North American families since 1989
Proudly serving North American families since 1989
Proudly serving North American families since 1989
Proudly serving North American families since 1989
Wednesday night your child sat at the kitchen table and reviewed their spelling words for twenty minutes. They knew every single one. You tested them three times. They got them all right. You felt relieved- maybe even optimistic.
Thursday morning the test came back. Six out of ten. Four words that they knew perfectly the night before had vanished.
This is one of the most frustrating and confusing experiences a parent can have. And it is one of the most common things families tell us when they first come to Strategic Learning Clinic. If your child seems to learn something one day and lose it the next, you are not imagining things- and your child is not being careless. Something specific is happening, and it has a name.
If your child seems to understand a lesson one day but forget it the next, the issue may not be a lack of effort or motivation. Difficulties with memory consolidation, attention, language processing, executive functioning, dyslexia, or ADHD can make it harder for information to move from short-term memory into long-term memory. Identifying the underlying cause is the first step toward helping children retain information more effectively and build lasting learning skills.
There is a critical distinction in how memory works that most parents are never told about. When your child studies something, they store it in short-term working memory. This is why they can recall it an hour later. But for information to stick- to become something they can reliably access days, weeks, or months later- it has to transfer into long-term memory. This process is called consolidation.
For many children, especially those with dyslexia, language processing differences, or executive function challenges, consolidation does not happen automatically. They can hold information temporarily, but it does not make it to the long-term storage it needs to reach.
Most tutoring approaches assume that if you practice something enough times, it will stick. For about 70 percent of children, this is true. For the other 30 percent- particularly those with the kinds of learning differences we work with- repetition alone is not enough. The problem is not effort. The problem is that the underlying pathway in the brain that should be encoding that information is not functioning the way it needs to.
Think of it like trying to fill a leaking bucket. No matter how much water you pour in, if the bucket leaks, you will always end up with less than you put in. The solution is not to pour faster- it is to fix the leak.
When children consistently forget information despite studying and practicing, additional academic support may be beneficial. A structured learning program can help identify whether the challenge is related to attention, memory, language processing, reading skills, executive functioning, or another learning difference.
At a specialized tutoring and learning center, educators can evaluate how a child learns and recommend targeted strategies to improve retention and understanding. For some students, this may involve executive functioning coaching, ADHD support, reading intervention programs, language learning support, or individualized tutoring designed around their specific needs.
The goal is not simply to help children memorize information for a test, but to develop stronger learning pathways that allow knowledge to be retained, organized, and applied over time.
The answer is not more practice of the same kind. It is a different kind of teaching entirely- one that builds the underlying cognitive pathways rather than simply re-presenting the same content.
Evidence-based remediation programs, like those offered at Strategic Learning Clinic, are specifically designed to address the root cause of consolidation problems. Our teachers use multisensory techniques, spaced retrieval practice, and structured language approaches that build the brain’s encoding and retrieval systems from the ground up.
We also work with families to create home routines that support consolidation- because what happens the night before a test matters far less than what happens in the days and weeks leading up to it.
If your child is forgetting what they learn, please hear this clearly: it is not a character flaw, and it is not permanent. With the right support, the brain can build better encoding pathways. We have seen it hundreds of times. The children who come to us frustrated and ashamed of their forgetting leave with strategies that work and the confidence that comes from finally understanding why things were hard.
If a child regularly forgets information, struggles to retain academic concepts, or falls behind despite effort and practice, a professional assessment can help identify the underlying cause and recommend appropriate support.
Evidence-based interventions, executive functioning coaching, structured tutoring, reading intervention programs, and individualized learning support can help strengthen learning and retention skills.
Dyslexia primarily affects language processing and reading skills, but it can also impact how word-based information is stored and retrieved, especially when reading and spelling are involved.
Yes. ADHD can affect attention and working memory, making it more difficult for children to fully encode information and recall it later.
Children may struggle with memory consolidation, attention, executive functioning, language processing, or learning differences that affect how information is stored and retrieved.

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