Learning Difficulties — Assessment & Support in Lahore and Online Across Pakistan

“He’s smart, but his marks don’t show it.” “She reads a word on one page and can’t read the same word on the next.” “Homework takes three hours and ends in tears — every night.” “The school says he’s lazy. I know my child. He is not lazy.”

If any of those sentences sounds like your house, this page was written for you. When school feels far harder for a child than it should — when effort goes in and results don’t come out — a specific learning difficulty is very often the missing explanation. And identifying it changes everything: the label “lazy” is replaced by an accurate map of how your child’s mind works, the school gets instructions it can act on, and — most importantly — the child gets an answer to the question quietly eating them: “why is this so easy for everyone else?”

This is the service where Umme Habiba’s profile is genuinely different from almost any competitor’s. She is both a clinical psychologist (MS Clinical Psychology, Riphah; MSc Applied Psychology, BZU) and a special educator (Master in Special Education, AIOU) with years of institutional experience in learning support. Most psychologists can test a child; far fewer can translate the results into Tuesday-morning classroom strategy. Here, the report is written by someone who has stood on both sides of it.

Learning difficulties (specific learning disorders) are persistent challenges in acquiring academic skills — most commonly reading (dyslexia), writing (dysgraphia) and mathematics (dyscalculia) — in a child whose overall ability is otherwise typical. They are neurological in origin and are not caused by laziness, low intelligence or poor teaching. Identification through psychological and educational assessment allows targeted teaching strategies and school accommodations that dramatically improve a child’s outcomes and confidence.

What are learning difficulties?

Evidence-Based Assessment Tools

An assessment is only as trustworthy as the methods behind it. I use internationally recognised, gold-standard tools rather than opinion alone.

Reading — possible dyslexia

Writing — possible dysgraphia

Mathematics — possible dyscalculia

General signs across all types

Why Early Identification Matters So Much

Two children sit in the same Class 3 room, both struggling to read. One is assessed this year: she gets structured literacy teaching, extra time, and an explanation that protects her self-esteem. The other is told to try harder for four more years. By Class 8, the gap between them is no longer just reading — it’s confidence, behaviour, friendships, and whether they still believe school is for them. Learning difficulties don’t cause most of their damage academically; they cause it through what the child concludes about themselves while undiagnosed. Assessment is how you interrupt that story early.

The Assessment Process, Step by Step

Typical turnaround for the written report in 24 hours. Testing sessions are child-paced with breaks; most children experience them as puzzles and games rather than exams, and many enjoy them — often the first academic setting where the adult is interested in how they think rather than whether they’re right.

1

Free intro call

Your concern, school reports reviewed, right pathway confirmed

2

Parent intake

Full developmental, medical, language and schooling history

3

Cognitive assessment

The child's reasoning and thinking profile (strengths matter as much as gaps)

4

Academic-skills assessment

Reading, spelling, writing and maths measured against age expectations

5

Screening for overlapping issues

ADHD, anxiety, language, vision/hearing referrals where indicated

6

Scoring, integration & report

Findings in plain language, with any applicable diagnosis

7

Feedback session

The report walked through with you, question by question

8

School plan

Specific accommodations and teaching strategies, communicated to school with your permission

Support Beyond the Assessment

Assessment is the map; support is the journey. Ongoing options include structured intervention planning and progress reviews each term; parent coaching for homework-without-tears; confidence repair — many of these children have internalised “I’m the dumb one,” and undoing that belief matters as much as phonics; and coordination when learning difficulties travel with ADHD or anxiety, as they very often do. Where a child needs specialised tutoring (e.g., structured literacy), you’ll get specific guidance on what to look for, so tuition money stops going to approaches that can’t work for this profile.

What the assessment distinguishes.

This is the part that requires clinical skill: a specific learning difficulty vs. an attention problem masquerading as one (an ADHD child who can read but can’t stay on the page) vs. anxiety suppressing performance vs. gaps from school changes or English/Urdu medium switches vs. a general developmental picture. Each of those explanations leads somewhere different; guessing between them is exactly what the standardised assessment replaces.

In Lahore, Across Pakistan, and for Overseas Families

Parent interviews, history-taking, questionnaires, feedback sessions and school coordination all run online — families consult from Faisalabad, Rawalpindi, Islamabad, Multan, Gujranwala, Sialkot, Bahawalpur and Sargodha. The standardised child testing itself requires an in-person session, so out-of-city families typically consolidate testing into one well-planned Lahore visit, with everything else handled remotely before and after. Overseas Pakistani families in the UK, UAE, Saudi Arabia, USA, Canada and Australia frequently schedule testing during a Pakistan visit, then continue feedback and support online — with reports written so their local school system can use them.

In-Person Clinics

Lahore

Online Sessions

Available Worldwide

Why Choose Clinical Psychologist Umme Habiba

Plenty of families arrive holding a previous report full of index scores and percentile jargon nobody ever explained. Here, the deliverable is different by design:

Plain language first

Every finding stated in words a parent and a class teacher can act on

Strengths documented

Because remediation is built through strengths, and because your child will read this report one day

Specific accommodations

Extra time, reduced copying from the board, oral answering options, keyboard use, seating, exam arrangements — matched to this child, not boilerplate

A home plan

Homework structure that ends the nightly war (usually: shorter, structured, and with the parent coached out of the "teacher" role)

Our Evidence-Based Approach

Educational Assessment

In-depth clinical testing to identify root causes of learning barriers, providing a formal diagnosis recognized by schools.

IEP Development

Drafting Individual Education Plans that outline specific accommodations and learning strategies tailored to your child.

Remedial Support

Specialized one-on-one sessions using evidence-based methods to build foundational literacy and numeracy skills.

Clinical Availability

Mon - Thu

02:00 PM - 08:00 PM

Saturday

10:00 AM - 04:00 PM

Fri / Sun

By Appointment Only

Why Trust Umme Habiba?

Expert Clinician

Extensive experience in pediatric neuropsychology with local curriculum knowledge.

Holistic Care

She support the emotional well-being of the whole family during the journey.

School Advocacy

Providing formal documentation required for school accommodations.

Related Services

Psychological Assessment

Full IQ and emotional screening for comprehensive understanding.

ADHD Support

Focus and attention strategies for children with ADHD.

Autism Services

Nurturing social skills in neurodivergent children.

FAQs — Learning Difficulties

Is my child just lazy?

In years of this work, “lazy” has almost always turned out to be the wrong label for a child working twice as hard for half the result. Laziness is an explanation of last resort; assessment usually finds the real one.

Formal learning-difficulty diagnosis is most reliable from about age 6–7, once reading instruction has properly begun. Younger children with red flags can be screened and monitored so intervention isn’t delayed even if the formal label waits.

No. Dyslexia occurs at every level of ability, and many dyslexic children are notably bright — which is precisely why their struggle confuses parents and teachers, and why “but he’s so intelligent!” and dyslexia sit together perfectly comfortably.

The report belongs to you. You decide who sees it. Most families share it with school because that’s what unlocks accommodations — but that is always your call.

Almost never the goal. The overwhelming majority of children with learning difficulties thrive in mainstream classrooms with the right accommodations — which is exactly what the report is designed to secure.

Everything except the standardised child testing — intake, questionnaires, feedback, school coordination — yes. Testing is consolidated into one planned in-person session in Lahore.

 It’s accounted for. Language background is a standard part of the intake, testing choices reflect it, and bilingual factors are explicitly separated from genuine learning difficulties in the analysis — a distinction that generic testing frequently gets wrong.

They co-occur very frequently, and untangling them is one of the main jobs of the assessment. Screening for attention is built in, and a full ADHD assessment can be integrated when indicated.

Scope depends on the question being asked, so fees are confirmed transparently at the free intro call before anything is booked. Most assessments run 2–4 appointments over 1–3 weeks plus the feedback session.

Sessions here are deliberately child-paced, strengths-focused and pressure-free. Children who arrived braced for another failure routinely leave asking when they can come back — that is not an exaggeration; it’s a design goal.

“Before meeting Umme Habiba, our son dreaded school every day. The assessment changed everything—it gave us a name for his struggle and a plan that actually worked. He’s reading books now that he used to cry just looking at.”

— Sarah K., Mother of 9-year-old

Ready to change your child's academic journey?

Book an initial consultation to discuss your concerns and find the right path forward for your child.