I think you mean child with Special Educational Needs. A child with ADHD or Dyslexia for instance could be such a child. They might have to go to special class or need more help studying. A child with Dyslexia would have to learn how to read when you are a Dyslexic.
Dyslexia was never cured just prevented when a child.
Dyslexia can be genetics or it can just happen. If your child is diagnosed with dyslexia, you should help them read, write, and learn so they won't feel alone.
If both parents are carriers then the child has a 25% chance of having cystic fibrosis. If one parent has CF and the other the other was just a carrier then the child has a 50% chance of having CF. If one parent has CF and the other has two normal genes then there is no chance of the child having CF. If one parent is a carrier and the other has two normal genes then there is no chance of the child having CF. If both parents have CF then there is a 100% chance that the child will also have CF.
An easy explanation for a child would be that dyslexia is a learning problem some children have. Dyslexia makes it hard to read and spell. The problem is inside of the brain and it does not mean the person is stupid.
No. Parents who have a child with Down syndrome do not have an increased chance in having another child with Down syndrome. Everyone has the same chance of having a child with Down syndrome, 1%.
Yes
Dysgraphia is focused around having trouble writing. Where as Dyslexia is having trouble reading.
There are thousands of Filipino citizens that suffer from dyslexia. There is not a list of names of the people.
Go to a doctor, see if he diagnoses you with dyslexia.
If one of the parents has Noonan syndrome the chance of having a child with NS is 50%. If neither parent has Noonan syndrome the chance of having a child with NS is 1 in 1,000.
Assuming T is dominant and t is recessive, and neither are sex-linked, Clara's mother and father are both tall. They have a 1:4 chance of have having a tall child with the genotype TT, a 1:2 chance of having a tall child with the genotype Tt, and a 1:4 chance of having a short child with the genotype tt. If neither T or t is dominant or recessive, both parents should be of medium height, with a 1:4 chance of having a tall child, a 1:2 change of having a medium height child, and a 1:4 chance of having a short child.