Have you asked your dd to read out loud to you? That might be helpful in determining whether or not there's a vision issue vs focus issue. A vision issue might show up as stumbling on words you'd expect her to know, skipping a line, skipping words here and there etc.

I wouldn't expect prescription for long distance to indicate a need for corrective prescription for reading (near distance), so I'm not surprised that glasses haven't helped. Astigmatism... that might be an issue.

If she is skipping words/lines or getting tripped up when she comes up to words you would anticipate her knowing, you might consider an eval by a developmental optometrist - these are drs who look at *vision* rather than eyesight - the regular eye dr checks how well each eye is seeing, a developmental optometrist checks how well the eyes work together. There is some controversy over developmental optometry because there have been DOs who try to sell people on the idea that vision therapy can cure dyslexia/LDs/etc - which it can't. It *can*, however, make a world of difference for children and adults who have issues with eyes not tracking together, double vision, etc.

I also wonder if it's possible that there's perhaps a subtle reading challenge that's not easily picked up due to your dd's high ability? It's quite possible she's able to pick up meaning through context yet challenged perhaps by a specific reading skill. My youngest dd has a challenge with reading that was incredibly difficult to diagnose simply because she was able to pull together meaning from context. Having an in-depth evaluation from a reading specialist that included an oral reading test as well as other tests that measure very specific skills that go into reading teased out the challenge. I wouldn't necessarily think that's necessary for your dd at this point - I'd rule out vision issues first.

Best wishes,

polarbear

ps - re specific questions for the optometrist - definitely listen to her read aloud first to see if you notice any issues. Ask the optometrist about those issues if you discover any. Also ask the optometrist if they have done any tests to see how well the eyes work together, did they test tracking, did they test for double vision, is the eyesight in one eye significantly weaker than the other.

pps - I'd also recommend audiobooks!

Last edited by polarbear; 03/23/16 10:47 AM.