Learning
Disabilities:
students
with learning disabilities struggle with the processing
written/oral/read material. For example: students with dyslexia. A few
helpful tips: chunk information into small digestible pieces and
provide a little extra time to for students to process and provide
opportunities for students to work on repetition/rehearsal.
Definition:
disorder in 1
or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in
using language, spoken or written, which disorder may manifest itself in the
imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do
mathematical calculations, including conditions such as perceptual
disabilities, brain injury , minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and
developmental aphasia. If the student does not achieve at the proper age
and ability levels in one or more of several specific areas when provided with
appropriate learning experiences age-appropriate instruction in one of more of
the following areas:
· Oral expression
· Listening comprehension
· Written expression
· Basic reading skill
· Reading fluency skills
· Reading comprehension
· Mathematics calculations
· Mathematics reasoning
Does
not make adequate progress to meet age or grade-level standards in one or more
of the prior areas identified when utilizing the process of the child’s
response to empirically based interventions; or a pattern of weaknesses and
strengths that have been determined to exist in performance, achievement or
both, relative to age, state-approved grade-level standards, or intellectual
development, as determined by certified assessment professionals. Specific
learning disabilities are considered a high-incidence disability. The
U.S. Department of Education reports that there are over 2.8 million students
being served for specific learning disabilities and that’s approximately 47.4%
of all children receiving special education.
Characteristics:
Intellectual
Academic
Reading
Writing and drawing
Arithmetic
Behavior
Communicative abilities
Physical
Teaching Strategies
Perceptual
Difficulties
Do not present two pieces
of information together that may be perceptually confusing.
Highlight important
characteristics of new material
Students
with Attention Difficulties
Maintain attention by
breaking long tasks and presenting limited amounts of information.
Use prompts and cues to
draw attention to important information. (like highlighting instructions)
Students
with Memory Difficulties
Chunking- grouping of
large strings of information into smaller or more manageable “chunks”.
Rehearsal or repetition,
either oral or silent
Elaboration weaving of the
material to be remembered into a meaningful content.
Categorization- being able
to memorize information in categories. Ex. Animals
RESOURCES
Gives
information about dyslexia, October is national dyslexia awareness month.
Gives
helpful information, not for just one disability, but for several disabilities.
http://www.ldaamerica.org
Want to create
opportunities for success for all children with learning disabilities.
Gives
basic information and resources for schools.
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