Some children — often called “slow learners” by families and schools — learn and understand more slowly than other children their age, and need things broken down, repeated and made practical. When this affects both learning and everyday skills, it may be an intellectual disability (a milder form is sometimes called borderline or slow learning).
A child who is a slow learner is not “naughty” or “lazy”. With the right teaching style and support, these children make real, steady progress — at school, at home and in life skills. The goal of therapy is independence and confidence, not labels.
Signs a child may be a slow learner
- Takes much longer than classmates to learn reading, writing or numbers
- Struggles to remember and follow instructions with several steps
- Finds it hard to apply something learned to a new situation
- Younger play and conversation than children the same age
- Slower to learn daily skills — dressing, money, telling the time
- Loses confidence, avoids schoolwork, or is called “weak in studies”
- Needs lots of repetition before something “sticks”
How we support slow learners in Multan
- A developmental and learning assessment to understand how your child learns best
- Special education and remedial teaching at the right pace and level
- Speech and language support for understanding and expression
- Occupational therapy for attention, handwriting and daily skills
- Practical life-skills and confidence building
- Close work with parents and school so support is consistent everywhere
Every child can learn — some just need a different route to get there. Early, patient, structured support makes the biggest difference, especially before learning gaps widen at school.
Consider a preschooler who learns more slowly and needs extra help with everyday skills, and whose frustration sometimes shows as challenging behaviour. Coaching his parents in clear, positive strategies — alongside building his communication and daily-living skills — calms the behaviour and grows his independence, step by step.
An illustrative, general example — not a real child. Every child is unique; the only way to know what yours needs is a proper assessment.What the research says
Our approach is grounded in published evidence, not opinion. A few findings from reputable, independent sources:
A randomised controlled trial found that group parent-training was effective in reducing challenging behaviour in pre-school children with intellectual disability, and increased parents’ confidence in managing it.
— Randomised controlled trial, US National Library of Medicine (PMC, 2024). View source
Other areas we support
Slow Learners: questions parents ask
My child is “weak in studies”. Does that mean an intellectual disability?
Not necessarily. Falling behind can come from many things — a learning difficulty like dyslexia, attention difficulties (ADHD), a hearing or speech problem, or simply needing a different teaching approach. An assessment finds the real reason so the support actually fits.
Can a slow learner go to a normal school?
Many can, especially with remedial support and the right adjustments. We help families understand their child’s level and work with schools so the child is supported rather than left behind.
Is it too late if my child is already 8 or 10?
No. Earlier is easier, but children and teenagers keep learning. We tailor support to your child’s current age and level and focus on the skills that matter most for their independence.
Worried about your child? Let’s talk.
A short, friendly conversation is the best first step. Call, text or WhatsApp us — we’ll listen and guide you, with no pressure.
MPS Road, Block A Model Town, Multan (near Bloomfield Hall School, Street No. 2) · Mon–Sat, 10 AM – 7 PM