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Dyslexia vs. Language Disorder: Understanding Your Child's Reading Profile

Decoding problems and comprehension problems have different roots. Learn how dyslexia and developmental language disorder show up in reading — and why accurate profiling matters for intervention.

Brittany Furnari, MS, CCC-SLPJuly 12, 20261 min read

Direct answer: Dyslexia is primarily a phonological processing disorder that impairs decoding and spelling. A developmental language disorder (DLD) affects broader language comprehension and expression — which can cause reading comprehension problems even when decoding looks adequate. Many children have overlapping profiles requiring dual-target intervention.

Dyslexia Profile

  • Slow, inaccurate word reading
  • Poor nonsense-word decoding
  • Spelling errors reflecting weak phoneme-grapheme mapping
  • Often strong listening comprehension relative to reading

Language Disorder Profile

  • Difficulty following multi-step directions
  • Limited vocabulary and sentence complexity in speech
  • Reads words aloud adequately but cannot retell or infer
  • Weak narrative and expository language skills

The Simple View of Reading

Reading comprehension = decoding × language comprehension. Weakness in either factor limits overall reading. SLPs evaluate both components independently rather than treating all reading problems as one diagnosis.

Who diagnoses dyslexia vs language disorder?

Psychologists and educational specialists often lead dyslexia identification. SLPs diagnose and treat language disorders and phonological processing deficits. Collaborative evaluation produces the clearest treatment plan.

Online Reading & Literacy Intervention

Front Range Speech Therapy offers language-based reading intervention nationwide via secure telehealth — led by a certified speech-language pathologist. Learn more on our reading & literacy page or request a reading consultation.

Sources

This article is educational and does not replace an individualized evaluation or medical advice.

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