By
Ecential Team
March 2, 2026
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Updated:
March 2, 2026
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5 min read

You're not a diagnostician. You know that. But you are, in many cases, the first trained adult outside a child's family to watch how they learn — and that matters more than most people realize when it comes to learning differences like dysgraphia and dyscalculia.
These two conditions are frequently missed in early childhood settings, not because teachers aren't observant, but because the early signs can look a lot like "normal" developmental variation. A child who avoids drawing activities, gets frustrated with puzzles, or consistently confuses quantities might just be "going at their own pace." Or they might be signaling something worth a closer look. Here's how ECE leaders and educators can build a process around that.
Early signs of dysgraphia in preschool/pre-K settings may include:
Early signs of dyscalculia may include:
For a helpful clinical overview, the International Dyslexia Association's resource page and Understood.org's dyscalculia guide are both excellent starting points for educators who want to go deeper.
When you notice patterns, write them down in behavioral terms, not interpretive ones. Instead of "Jaylen struggles with writing," write "During three consecutive journaling activities in the past two weeks, Jaylen declined to pick up a pencil, hid under the table, and cried for approximately 5 minutes."
Specific, objective documentation:
Use an anecdotal log, your existing classroom management tools, or even a simple shared document among your teaching team. The goal is pattern recognition — one incident is a moment, five incidents is a data point.
This is where many ECE directors hesitate — and understandably so. No parent wants to hear that their child might be struggling. But the way you frame the conversation makes all the difference.
What to avoid: "We think your child has a learning disability."
What to try instead: "We've noticed that [child's name] seems to have a really hard time with [specific activity], and we want to share what we're seeing so we can support them together. Would you be open to talking about it?"
A few tips for these conversations:
In the U.S., children ages 3–5 are entitled to a free special education evaluation through their local school district under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). This is a powerful tool that many ECE providers and families don't know about.
Key steps:
You can also refer families to their pediatrician, a developmental pediatrician, a neuropsychologist, or an occupational therapist (especially relevant for dysgraphia) for private evaluation if the family wants to pursue it independently.
The Child Mind Institute has an excellent parent-facing guide you can share with families — it's clear, warm, and non-alarmist.
While families pursue evaluation pathways, you don't have to wait. There are meaningful, low-cost adjustments you can make in your ECE setting today that support children who may have dysgraphia or dyscalculia — and that benefit alllearners.
For children who may have dysgraphia:
For children who may have dyscalculia:
The National Center for Learning Disabilities has practical classroom strategies worth bookmarking.
The most powerful thing an ECE leader can do is create a team culture where observation and documentation are valued — not as bureaucratic tasks, but as acts of advocacy for children. Hold brief team discussions around concerning patterns. Create a shared vocabulary for what you're seeing. And remind your staff: you're not diagnosing anyone. You're bearing witness. That's enough. That matters.
Early identification of dysgraphia and dyscalculia is not a burden on ECE settings — it's one of their greatest superpowers.