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SLD Domain Reference
Oral Language · Reading Comprehension · Written Expression · Math Problem Solving
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IDEA SLD Eligibility Domains · TAC §89.1040

SLD Domain Reference

The eight IDEA SLD eligibility domains define where a student can qualify — but they are not the same as the named disability patterns. A student can qualify under Written Expression without dysgraphia. A student can qualify under Oral Expression without a DLD diagnosis. This reference covers the domain logic: what the domain actually means educationally, what data pattern supports eligibility, which subtests anchor the finding across your batteries, and how to write it in the FIE.

How to use this reference: The four priority domains (Oral Language, Reading Comprehension, Written Expression, Math Problem Solving) are fully built out. The four battery-anchored domains (Basic Reading Skills, Reading Fluency, Math Calculation, Written Expression overlap) are covered as cross-references — those profiles are addressed in depth in the Dyslexia, Dysgraphia, and Dyscalculia references.
What the domain means
🗣️ Listening Comprehension (LC)

The ability to understand spoken language — deriving meaning from oral input. It requires vocabulary, background knowledge, linguistic processing, and the ability to hold and integrate information across connected discourse.

LC is the receptive half of oral language. A student with LC difficulty may miss orally-delivered instruction, struggle with multi-step verbal directions, lose the thread in extended classroom discussion, or perform poorly on any task where understanding speech is the prerequisite.

Distinguishing feature: LC is input. If a student can speak and express ideas but cannot reliably understand what is said to them, LC is the domain — not OE.
💬 Oral Expression (OE)

The ability to express ideas, information, and reasoning through spoken language. It requires word retrieval, syntactic formulation, narrative organization, and expressive vocabulary.

OE is the expressive half. A student with OE difficulty may understand what is said but struggle to formulate responses, use words imprecisely, speak in fragmented sentences, or produce oral narratives that lack cohesion despite good comprehension.

Distinguishing feature: OE is output. Evaluate whether the student's spoken production matches what they appear to understand. A large comprehension-expression gap is the clearest OE signal.
📋 Eligibility Data Pattern — What Needs to Be Present

Under IDEA and TAC §89.1040, SLD-Listening Comprehension or SLD-Oral Expression requires:

  • Below-average performance in the domain (LC or OE composite/cluster typically ≤ 85, or meaningfully below ability).
  • Unexpected relative to ability — the deficit is not fully explained by cognitive ability, sensory impairment, or lack of instruction.
  • Adverse educational impact — the student needs specially designed instruction to access the general curriculum because of the oral language deficit.
  • Exclusionary factors ruled out — for EB students especially: is this a language difference (normal second-language acquisition) or a disorder present in both languages?
Assessment tools — subtests by battery
🔬 Key Subtests Across Your Batteries

Anchor the LC/OE finding with a composite where possible. Use individual subtests to explain the profile.

WJ-V ACH — Oral Language Cluster
Oral Language (wjach-OralLang) Listening Comprehension (wjach-ListeningComp) Oral Expression (wjach-OralExpression)
Oral Comprehension (wjach-OralComp) Oral Language Samples (wjach-OralLangSamples) Picture Vocabulary (wjach-PicVocabACH) Story Comprehension (wjach-StoryComp) Academic Vocabulary (wjach-AcademicVocab) Vocabulary (wjach-Vocabulary)

WJ-V ACH OL cluster is the strongest normed composite for LC/OE eligibility findings. Oral Language Samples (spontaneous production) and Oral Comprehension are the two most direct subtest anchors.

WJ-IV OL (Oral Language Battery)
Oral Language OL (wjol-OL) Listening Comprehension (wjol-ListComp) Oral Expression (wjol-OralExp) Broad Oral Language (wjol-BroadOL)
Oral Comprehension (wjol-OralComp) Oral Language Samples (wjol-OLSamples) Story Recall (wjol-StoryRec) Picture Vocabulary (wjol-PicVoc) Understanding Directions (wjol-UnderDir) Sentence Repetition (wjol-SentRep) Retrieval Fluency (wjol-RetFlu)

Use the WJ-IV OL battery when oral language is the primary area of concern and you want composites dedicated to LC vs. OE separately. Understanding Directions is particularly sensitive to LC deficits in classroom-analogous tasks.

WIAT-IV — Oral Language
Listening Comprehension (wiat-LC) Oral Expression (wiat-OE)
Expressive Vocabulary (wiat-EV) Oral Word Fluency (wiat-OWF) Sentence Repetition (wiat-SR)

WIAT-IV LC and OE are composite scores — use them as the eligibility anchor. Expressive Vocabulary and Oral Word Fluency are the expressive subtests; Sentence Repetition taps verbal working memory and syntactic processing.

KTEA-3 — Oral Language
Oral Language (ktea-OralLang) Listening Comprehension (ktea-LC) Oral Expression (ktea-OE) Oral Fluency (ktea-OralFlu)

KTEA-3 provides separate LC and OE composites. Oral Fluency (naming fluency/word retrieval speed) is useful for word-finding concerns within OE.

WISC-V — Cognitive Anchors for OL Profile
VCI (wisc-VCI) Similarities (wisc-Sim) Vocabulary (wisc-Voc) Comprehension (wisc-Comp) Information (wisc-Info)

VCI reflects crystallized language ability (Gc). Low VCI + low OL achievement scores = convergent evidence of language-based weakness. High VCI + low OL achievement = unexpected finding worth investigating (possible EB language difference, or domain-specific processing issue).

WJ-V COG — Cognitive Anchors
Gc (wjcog-Gc) Oral Vocabulary (wjcog-OralVocab) Verbal Analogies (wjcog-VerbalAnalogies) Story Recall (wjcog-StoryRecall) Story Comprehension (wjcog-StoryComprehension)

Gc (Comprehension-Knowledge) is the crystallized language substrate. When Gc is also low, it supports a language-based cognitive profile. When Gc is average but OL achievement is low, investigate language difference vs. disorder more closely.

The critical differential — Language Disorder vs. Language Difference
⚖️ DLD vs. Language Difference (Stanley TEDA 2026 Framework)

This is the highest-stakes differential for EB students — and the most common area where SLD-OL eligibility is inappropriately assigned or inappropriately denied.

  • Language Difference: Reduced English proficiency that reflects normal second-language acquisition. The student's home language is intact and age-appropriate. English weaknesses are expected given their exposure and opportunity to learn.
  • Developmental Language Disorder (DLD): A persistent, unexpected deficit in language processing that is present in both languages and is not explained by second-language acquisition. DLD is not an IDEA eligibility — but it maps onto SI (if SLP-identified) or SLD-OL (if academically impactful and requiring SDI).
Stanley TEDA 2026 — Difference vs. Disorder Framework:
The Stanley framework uses cross-linguistic evidence as its core organizing principle: whether deficits appear in the student's dominant/home language, whether they are unexpected given language exposure and opportunity, and whether DLD hallmarks are present across both languages. The weight of evidence across all three dimensions — not any single indicator — drives the determination.
For the full indicator set and decision framework, see the Language Difference vs. Disorder Reference ↗ (Stanley, TEDA 2026).

For EB students: TELPAS composite and domain ratings, home language sample data, and parent/teacher input in both languages are essential data sources. A bilingual SLP or bilingual assessment data (Batería IV OL, WMLS-R, BESA) strengthens the differential.

FIE narrative models
📝 Mechanism → Score → Implication (Schultz C-SEP framing)
"Listening comprehension — the ability to understand and derive meaning from spoken language — was found to be a significant area of educational need for [student]. On the WIAT-IV, [student]'s Listening Comprehension composite score of [XX] fell in the [range], below the level expected for [his/her/their] age and grade. This finding was supported by [his/her/their] performance on the WJ-V ACH Listening Comprehension cluster ([XX]), which similarly reflected difficulty understanding extended oral discourse. In the educational setting, this pattern is consistent with teacher reports that [student] frequently requires directions to be repeated, misses key information during whole-class instruction, and struggles to follow multi-step verbal tasks without visual support. This listening comprehension profile has direct implications for [student]'s access to classroom instruction and represents an area requiring specially designed instruction."
📝 Oral Expression FIE model
"Oral expression — the ability to communicate ideas and information through spoken language — was an area of relative weakness for [student]. [His/Her/Their] Oral Expression composite on the WIAT-IV was [XX] ([range]), with particular difficulty on tasks requiring expressive vocabulary retrieval ([Expressive Vocabulary subtest] = [SS]) and oral narrative formulation. Behavioral observations during testing indicated that [student] understood instructions and questions but frequently paused to find words, used vague or imprecise language, and produced shorter utterances than expected for [his/her/their] age. This expressive profile — intact comprehension with reduced expressive output — is consistent with a word-retrieval and formulation difficulty that affects [student]'s ability to demonstrate knowledge orally, participate in academic discussions, and complete oral assessments at the level expected for [his/her/their] grade."
SLD-OE eligibility note: Before writing OE-based SLD eligibility, confirm with the SLP whether the student has been evaluated for Speech Impairment. SLD-OE and SI can co-exist, but should be documented separately for different reasons. SLD-OE requires that the oral expression deficit requires specially designed instruction in the educational setting — not just speech therapy.
What the domain means
📖 Reading Comprehension — What It Is

Reading comprehension is the ability to derive meaning from written text. It is the product of two components (Simple View of Reading): word recognition (decoding, fluency) × language comprehension (vocabulary, background knowledge, inference, text structure).

A student can fail at reading comprehension through two completely different pathways — and the eligibility framing and instructional response differ completely depending on which it is.

  • Decoding-driven RC failure: The student cannot read the words accurately or fluently enough to direct cognitive resources to comprehension. Fix word recognition → comprehension improves. This is a Basic Reading Skills / Reading Fluency profile first.
  • Language-driven RC failure: The student can decode the words but cannot construct meaning from them. Vocabulary, inference, and text-structure processing are the limiting factors. This is the true SLD-Reading Comprehension profile — it may co-occur with dyslexia or exist independently.
📊 The Simple View of Reading — Applied to Eligibility

RC = Word Recognition × Language Comprehension

This formula drives your eligibility logic:

  • Low WR, adequate LC: → Dyslexia / Basic Reading profile. RC is low because words are not read accurately. LC is the preserved strength. Address decoding; comprehension may follow.
  • Adequate WR, low LC: → True SLD-Reading Comprehension. The student reads words but cannot make meaning. Language is the substrate. This often overlaps with oral language deficits (low OL = low LC = low RC).
  • Low WR, low LC: → Both pathways involved. May qualify under multiple SLD domains. Instruction must address both strands.
Key diagnostic move: Compare Basic Reading Skills score to Reading Comprehension score, then compare RC to Listening Comprehension (oral). If LC (oral) is also low, language is the primary substrate — this is not purely a print-based problem.
📋 Eligibility Data Pattern

SLD-Reading Comprehension eligibility is most defensible when:

  • Reading Comprehension composite is below average (typically SS ≤ 85, or meaningfully below ability/other scores).
  • The deficit is not fully explained by decoding failure — i.e., Basic Reading Skills are at least low average, or you can demonstrate the student can read the words but not understand them.
  • Listening comprehension (oral) is similarly impaired, supporting a language-base explanation — or LC (oral) is adequate, supporting a text-specific processing deficit.
  • Adverse educational impact is documented: the student cannot access grade-level texts, fails comprehension-based assessments, or cannot demonstrate content knowledge in reading-dependent formats.
Assessment tools — subtests by battery
🔬 Key Subtests
WJ-V ACH
Reading Comprehension (wjach-ReadingComp) Passage Comprehension (wjach-PassageComp) Paragraph Reading Comprehension (wjach-ParagraphReading) Academic Vocabulary (wjach-AcademicVocab) Oral Reading (wjach-OralReading)

Passage Comprehension (cloze format) and Paragraph Reading Comprehension (extended text) are the two anchors. Academic Vocabulary adds vocabulary-comprehension link evidence.

WIAT-IV
Reading Comprehension (wiat-RC) Reading Comprehension & Fluency (wiat-ReadCompFlu) Oral Reading Fluency (wiat-ORF)

WIAT-IV RC is the primary composite. Compare to Oral Reading Fluency — if ORF is low, decodingfluency is limiting comprehension access.

KTEA-3
Reading Comprehension (ktea-RC) Silent Reading Fluency (ktea-SRF)

KTEA-3 RC is a strong anchor. Silent Reading Fluency helps separate speed-limited from comprehension-limited profiles.

WISC-V + WJ-V COG — Cross-Domain Anchors
VCI (wisc-VCI) Comprehension (wisc-Comp) Vocabulary (wisc-Voc) Gc (wjcog-Gc) Story Comprehension (wjcog-StoryComprehension) Verbal Analogies (wjcog-VerbalAnalogies)

VCI and Gc are the language-comprehension cognitive anchors. If these are also low, the RC deficit has a language-cognitive substrate. If VCI/Gc are average and RC is still low, investigate text-specific processing (inference, text structure, vocabulary depth).

The critical differential — RC vs. Basic Reading Skills
FeatureSLD–Basic Reading Skills (Dyslexia)SLD–Reading Comprehension
Word readingLow — decoding failsAdequate or average
Reading fluencyLow — slow, laboredMay be average or mildly reduced
RC scoreLow — secondary to decoding failureLow — primary deficit
Oral LC (listening)Usually intact — can understand when read toOften also low — language-based
Phonological processingLow PA, PM, and/or RANUsually intact
VocabularyUsually intactMay be low — drives comprehension failure
FIE emphasisPhonological mechanism → decoding → RC secondaryLanguage comprehension mechanism → text processing → RC primary
Instructional directionStructured literacy / decoding interventionVocabulary, text structure, inference instruction; read-alouds do not resolve
FIE narrative model
📝 Language-Based RC — Mechanism → Score → Implication
"Reading comprehension — the ability to construct meaning from written text — was a significant area of educational concern for [student]. On the [battery], [student]'s Reading Comprehension composite of [XX] fell in the [range], below the level expected for [his/her/their] age and grade. Importantly, [student]'s word reading accuracy was [average/low average] ([Basic Reading Skills SS = XX]), indicating that the comprehension difficulty is not primarily driven by decoding failure. Rather, [student]'s listening comprehension (oral) was similarly limited ([Listening Comprehension SS = XX]), supporting a language-based explanation in which the underlying difficulty constructing meaning from language — whether heard or read — is the primary factor. This pattern is consistent with a reading comprehension deficit rooted in language comprehension, including vocabulary knowledge, inferencing, and integration of information across text. In the classroom, [student] struggles to answer questions about passages [he/she/they] can read aloud, loses the main idea in multi-paragraph text, and has difficulty with content-area reading in science and social studies."
What the domain means
✍️ Written Expression — Beyond Handwriting and Spelling

Written expression is the highest-order writing skill — the ability to communicate ideas in writing at the composition level. It includes sentence formulation, organizational structure, idea development, vocabulary use, and the ability to translate thinking into written text.

SLD-Written Expression is often confused with dysgraphia (a named pattern), but they are not the same:

  • Dysgraphia affects the transcription mechanics — handwriting (graphomotor) and/or spelling (orthographic). The breakdown is at the physical and encoding level.
  • SLD-Written Expression (without dysgraphia) is a composition-level deficit — the student can form letters and spell adequately but cannot organize, formulate, and produce coherent written text. This may reflect language, executive function, or working memory demands specific to written output.
Simple View of Writing (Berninger): Writing = Transcription (handwriting + spelling) + Executive Function + Text Generation. SLD-WE without dysgraphia reflects a text generation and/or EF deficit, not a transcription deficit.
🔀 The Three Written Expression Pathways
  • Pathway 1 — Transcription-based (Dysgraphia): Handwriting and/or spelling are the bottleneck. Composition is limited because encoding demands consume working memory. Addressed in the Dysgraphia Reference.
  • Pathway 2 — Language-based (oral language substrate): The student's oral language is also limited. Their writing mirrors their speaking — reduced vocabulary, short sentences, poor cohesion. This is an oral language deficit manifesting in writing. May qualify under both SLD-OE and SLD-WE.
  • Pathway 3 — EF/WM composition deficit: Oral language is adequate, transcription is adequate, but written composition is significantly reduced. The student can discuss a topic well but cannot translate that thinking to the page. Executive function — planning, organization, sustained effort across a composition — is the limiting factor. This is often the most overlooked pathway.
📋 Eligibility Data Pattern

SLD-Written Expression eligibility requires:

  • Written Expression composite below average (SS ≤ 85, or meaningfully below ability) — specifically the composition-level measure, not just spelling.
  • Adverse impact on academic functioning — cannot produce written work at grade level despite adequate instruction.
  • Pathway identified: The FIE should name which pathway drives the deficit. If dysgraphia is also present, document both (transcription + composition) but keep them mechanistically distinct.
FIE pitfall to avoid: Low Spelling score alone does not support SLD-Written Expression. Spelling is a transcription skill — it supports the dysgraphia / SLD-WE (transcription) argument, not the composition argument. You need Essay Composition, Oral Language Samples, Sentence Composition, or Writing Samples data to establish the composition-level deficit.
Assessment tools — subtests by battery
🔬 Key Subtests
WIAT-IV — Written Expression
Written Expression (wiat-WE) Essay Composition (wiat-EC) Sentence Composition (wiat-SC) Spelling (wiat-SP) Alphabet Writing Fluency (wiat-AWF) Orthographic Fluency (wiat-OF)

Essay Composition is the purest composition measure. Sentence Composition tests sentence-level formulation. AWF and OF are transcription/graphomotor — anchor those to the dysgraphia pathway, not composition.

WJ-V ACH — Written Language
Written Expression (wjach-WrittenExp) Spelling Skills (wjach-SpellingSkills) Oral Language Samples (wjach-OralLangSamples) Sentence Writing Accuracy (wjach-SentWriteAcc) Spelling (wjach-Spelling)

WJ-V ACH Oral Language Samples is a key differentiator — if oral production is also limited, the WE deficit has a language substrate. Written Expression cluster anchors the eligibility composite.

KTEA-3
Written Expression (ktea-WE) Spelling (ktea-SP)
WISC-V — Cognitive Anchors for WE Profile
WMI (wisc-WMI) Digit Span (wisc-DS) Picture Span (wisc-PS) Letter-Number Sequencing (wisc-LNS) VCI (wisc-VCI)

Working memory (WMI) is the key cognitive anchor for the EF/WM composition pathway. Low WMI + adequate oral language + low written composition = strong EF/WM argument. Low VCI + low oral language + low WE = language-substrate argument.

FIE narrative models by pathway
📝 Language-Based WE — Pathway 2
"Written expression — the ability to communicate ideas effectively in writing at the composition level — was a significant area of educational concern for [student]. [His/Her/Their] Written Expression composite on the WIAT-IV was [XX] ([range]), with particular difficulty on Essay Composition ([SS = XX]), reflecting limited idea development, organizational structure, and sentence complexity in extended writing tasks. Notably, [student]'s oral language production was also limited (Oral Language Samples, [SS = XX]), indicating that the written expression difficulty reflects a language-level deficit in text generation — not a mechanical transcription problem. [Student] could form letters and spell at an adequate level ([Spelling SS = XX]), supporting the conclusion that the composition deficit is language-based rather than graphomotor. In the classroom, this pattern manifests as short, underdeveloped written responses, difficulty expanding ideas beyond one or two sentences, and written work that does not reflect [his/her/their] oral knowledge of content."
📝 EF/WM Composition — Pathway 3
"Despite adequate oral language skills and functional spelling ability, [student] demonstrated significant difficulty with written composition at the sentence and discourse levels. [His/Her/Their] Written Expression composite of [XX] ([range]) on the [battery] fell below expectations for age and grade, with particular difficulty on tasks requiring sustained composition across multiple sentences or a full paragraph. Working memory — the ability to hold and manipulate information in mind while executing a task — was identified as a contributing cognitive factor ([WISC-V WMI = XX], [range]), consistent with difficulty managing the simultaneous demands of planning, formulating, and transcribing extended written text. Unlike [his/her/their] oral communication, which was organized and detailed during testing, [student]'s written output was notably reduced in length, detail, and coherence, suggesting that the cognitive load of written production — not language knowledge — is the limiting factor."
OHI/ADHD overlap: When EF and WM are the primary drivers of WE difficulty, consider whether OHI/ADHD eligibility is the more appropriate or co-occurring eligibility. SLD-WE driven by EF/WM without a language or transcription substrate can be difficult to distinguish from ADHD-driven writing difficulty. Document Conners-4 data, behavioral observations during writing tasks, and consistency of performance across structured vs. unstructured writing conditions.
What the domain means
🔢 Math Problem Solving — What It Actually Measures

Math problem solving (applied math reasoning) is the ability to apply mathematical knowledge to real-world and multi-step problems. It is language-mediated math — it requires reading comprehension, vocabulary, inference, and the ability to decode what a word problem is asking before any math is done.

This domain is frequently misattributed. A student who scores low on Applied Problems or Math Problem Solving subtests is not necessarily dyscalculic — they may have a reading comprehension, oral language, or working memory deficit that makes the language demands of word problems the limiting factor.

The core diagnostic question: Is the student's Math Problem Solving score low because of a math deficit — or because of a language/reading deficit that makes word problems inaccessible? These require different interventions and may reflect different eligibility areas.
⚖️ Three Pathways to Low Math Problem Solving
  • Pathway 1 — True dyscalculia: Math calculation, math fact automaticity, and number sense are ALL also low. Math Problem Solving is low because the foundational number understanding isn't there. This is covered in the Dyscalculia Reference. The dyscalculia pattern requires automaticity + number sense deficits — MPS alone does not establish it.
  • Pathway 2 — Language/reading mediated: Math calculation and number facts are adequate or average, but MPS is disproportionately low. The student can do the math — they cannot access the problem. Reading comprehension, vocabulary, and/or oral language are typically also low. This qualifies under SLD-Math Problem Solving with a language-based mechanism explanation.
  • Pathway 3 — Working memory / executive function: Multi-step problem solving requires holding information in mind, planning steps, and monitoring. A student with low WM and/or processing speed may fail MPS tasks even with adequate math knowledge and adequate reading. The mechanism here overlaps with OHI/ADHD; document cognitive data carefully.
📋 Eligibility Data Pattern

SLD-Math Problem Solving eligibility is most defensible when:

  • Math Problem Solving composite is below average (SS ≤ 85, or meaningfully below ability).
  • A pathway is identified — why problem solving is low matters for the eligibility narrative.
  • If the mechanism is language-based: document low RC and/or OL alongside low MPS and name the language mediation explicitly.
  • If the mechanism is WM/EF: document WMI, processing speed, and multi-step task performance; consider whether OHI/ADHD co-eligibility is appropriate.
  • If dyscalculia is also suspected: both MPS and Calculation / Math Fluency must be below average — MPS alone does not establish a dyscalculia pattern.
Assessment tools — subtests by battery
🔬 Key Subtests
WJ-V ACH
Math Problem Solving (wjach-MathProbSolve) Applied Problems (wjach-AppliedProblems) Number Concepts (wjach-NumberConcepts) Math Problem Identification (wjach-MathProbID)

Applied Problems is the primary anchor — real-world word problems. Math Problem Identification (identifying the relevant operation) can help isolate whether the student understands the math structure once the language barrier is removed.

WIAT-IV
Math Problem Solving (wiat-MPS) Numerical Operations (wiat-NO)

Compare MPS to Numerical Operations directly. If NO is average and MPS is low, that split is your language-mediation evidence — the student can do untimed calculation but cannot navigate word problem language.

WISC-V + WJ-V COG — Cognitive Anchors
WMI (wisc-WMI) Arithmetic (wisc-Arith) FRI (wisc-FRI) Figure Weights (wisc-FW) Matrix Reasoning (wisc-MR) VCI (wisc-VCI)

Arithmetic (WISC-V) is a mental math / working memory subtest — low Arithmetic with average Matrix Reasoning supports WM as the limiting factor in MPS, not reasoning. Low VCI alongside low MPS supports language mediation. Low FRI alongside low MPS supports reasoning deficit (true math reasoning weakness).

Cross-domain comparison — essential for MPS
Reading Comprehension (wiat-RC / wjach-ReadingComp / ktea-RC) Listening Comprehension (wiat-LC / wjach-ListeningComp / ktea-LC) Math Calculation (wiat-NO / wjach-MathProbSolve) Math Fluency (wjach-MathFacts / wiat-MFA)

Always compare MPS to both RC (does the reading barrier explain it?) and Math Calculation (is the math knowledge there?). MPS lower than both RC and Math Calc suggests WM/EF as the specific bottleneck.

Differential — three pathways compared
FeatureLanguage/Reading Mediated MPSWM/EF Mediated MPSDyscalculia (MPS + Calculation)
MPS scoreLowLowLow
Math CalculationAverageAverage to Low AvgLow — required for dyscalculia pattern
Math FluencyAverageMay be low (timed WM demand)Low — a core indicator
Reading ComprehensionLow — language is the substrateAverage to low averageVaries; may be low if co-occurring RC deficit
Oral Language (LC/OE)Low — convergent evidenceUsually adequateVaries
WM (WMI / Digit Span)May be averageLow — primary cognitive anchorOften low (shared substrate)
Number sense / magnitudeUsually intactUsually intactLow — required for dyscalculia
Eligibility anchorSLD-Math Problem Solving (language mechanism)SLD-Math Problem Solving (EF/WM) ± OHI/ADHDSLD-Math Calculation + SLD-Math Problem Solving
FIE narrative emphasisLanguage comprehension demands of word problemsMulti-step planning and WM load in problem solvingNumber sense and automaticity deficits driving both domains
FIE narrative models
📝 Language-Mediated MPS — Mechanism → Score → Implication
"Math problem solving — the ability to apply mathematical knowledge to real-world problems — requires not only math skill, but the ability to read, understand, and interpret the language of a word problem before any calculation begins. For [student], this language demand is the primary limiting factor. [His/Her/Their] Math Problem Solving composite of [XX] ([range]) fell below age expectations, while math calculation skills ([Numerical Operations SS = XX]) and math fluency ([SS = XX]) were in the [average/low average] range, indicating that [student]'s difficulty is not primarily with the mathematics itself. Rather, [student]'s reading comprehension ([RC SS = XX]) and listening comprehension ([LC SS = XX]) were similarly limited, indicating that the language demands of word problems — parsing the question, identifying relevant information, and translating verbal descriptions into mathematical operations — are the bottleneck. In the classroom, this means [student] may solve a calculation correctly in isolation but struggle significantly on any math task presented in word problem format, on math STAAR (which is language-heavy), or on open-ended math explanations."
The remaining four IDEA SLD domains

These four domains are fully supported by your existing clinical references. The named-pattern references (dyslexia, dysgraphia, dyscalculia) are the deep clinical resources for these areas. This tab provides orientation and cross-links.

📚
Basic Reading Skills
Word reading · Decoding · Phonological processing

Basic Reading Skills covers word reading accuracy and decoding — the ability to identify printed words using phonological decoding and sight word recognition. When this domain is the primary SLD area, the clinical picture is almost always dyslexia. The phonological mechanism (PA, PM, RAN) drives the deficit.

Key subtests: WJ-V ACH Basic Reading Skills cluster · WIAT-IV Basic Reading composite · KTEA-3 · CTOPP-2 Phonological Awareness/Memory Composites · TAPS-4

→ Full clinical reference: Dyslexia Reference

Reading Fluency
Reading rate · Accuracy · Automaticity

Reading Fluency covers the speed and accuracy with which a student reads connected text. Fluency deficits almost always co-occur with Basic Reading Skills deficits in dyslexia, but can persist even when decoding improves — particularly with RAN deficits. A student with strong decoding accuracy but very slow reading rate may qualify under Reading Fluency independently.

Key subtests: WJ-V ACH Reading Fluency cluster · WIAT-IV Oral Reading Fluency · KTEA-3 Silent Reading Fluency · WJ-V ACH Oral Reading

→ Full clinical reference: Dyslexia Reference

🧮
Math Calculation
Math facts · Procedural algorithms · Numerical operations

Math Calculation covers the ability to perform written computation — math fact retrieval, procedural algorithms, and numerical operations under untimed and timed conditions. When Math Calculation is the primary deficit alongside math fluency and number sense weaknesses, the dyscalculia clinical framework applies.

Key subtests: WJ-V ACH Math Facts Fluency · WIAT-IV Numerical Operations + Math Fluency composites · KTEA-3 · KeyMath-3 · WISC-V Arithmetic

→ Full clinical reference: Dyscalculia Reference

🖊️
Written Expression — Transcription Pathway
Spelling · Handwriting · Orthographic processing

When Written Expression eligibility is driven by spelling and handwriting deficits (transcription pathway), the dysgraphia clinical framework applies. This is distinct from the composition-level Written Expression deficit covered in the Written Expression tab of this page. The transcription pathway involves graphomotor and/or orthographic processing mechanisms.

Key subtests: WIAT-IV Spelling, Alphabet Writing Fluency, Orthographic Fluency · WJ-V ACH Spelling Skills cluster · TOC composites · KTEA-3 Spelling

→ Full clinical reference: Dysgraphia Reference

Reference Note: Clinical guidance on this page is original synthesis prepared for professional reference. Named frameworks (Stanley TEDA 2026, Schreuder TEDA 2026, Berninger Simple View of Writing) are cited with attribution; practitioners should consult the primary sources and referenced hub pages for complete framework details. Eligibility determinations must be made by a qualified multidisciplinary ARD team. Barber Sped Hub is an independent diagnostic reference and is not affiliated with or endorsed by any researcher, publisher, or professional organization.