Group 6
CHAPTER PRESENTATION
BY: KIMBERLY COOPER, NOEMI GUERRA, ARLYN PINO, JACQUELINE SIGLER, VERONICA FISHER, AND NAOMI SAMOLE-PRAGER
The issue of how to define learning disabilities has received considerable attention in the field since 1963, when Samuel Kirk suggested the term specific learning disabilities at the organizational meeting of the Learning Disabilities Association of America (LDA).
Specific learning disabilities – Represents a heterogeneous group of students who, despite
adequate cognitive functioning and the ability to learn some skills and strategies relatively quickly and easily, have great difficulty learning other skills and strategies. A student is not regarded as having specific learning disabilities if the
deficit is primarily the result of any of the following: Visual, hearing, or motor disability Mental retardation Emotional disturbance Environmental, cultural, or economic disadvantage Lack of appropriate instruction in reading
DEFINITIONS AND TYPESOF LEARNING DISABILITIES
The term children with specific learning disabilities means those children who have a disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written, that many manifest itself in an imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations. The major components of this definition include the following:
Difficulty with academic and learning task Discrepancy between expected and actual achievement that can be
documented through low response to intervention Disorder in basic psychological processing Exclusion of other causes
CHILDREN WITHSPECIFIC LEARNING DISABILITIES
Determining that students have a learning disability has always been a difficult and somewhat controversial task. This is largely because it is difficult to distinguish between a learning problem and a learning disability. IQ- Achievement Discrepancy: These studies included measures of behavior, academic achievement, and
cognitive abilities. These studies found little relationship between IQ and word reading. IDEIA 2004 includes the use of response to intervention (RTI) as an alternative to the traditional aptitude-
achievement discrepancy approaches to identifying students with learning disabilities. RTI provides a validated intervention to students in the instructional area of need before determining
their qualifications for special education. Students who respond adequately to the intervention and are able to make appropriate progress in the classroom are unlikely to require special education. Students whose response to the intervention is low are very likely to require special education.
Joseph Blankenship’s ideas about learning disabilities are that initially these students may not seem different from other students, because they participate in classroom discussions and may appear to understand the content covered. But as assignments are submitted and tests are given, he realizes that students with LD have difficulties with reading, writing, math, studying, and organizing their time.
RTI neither creates nor fixes learning disabilities. However, models such as 3-Tier Reading provided a safety net for students who might end up in special education.
DIAGNOSING STUDENTSWITH LEARNING DISABILITIES
Students with LD often have difficulties with attention and in some cases, hyperactivity.
Learning disabilities represent a group of disorders that causes students to have learning and academic difficulties.
Dyslexia refers to severe difficulty in learning to read, particularly as it relates to decoding and spelling
Dysgraphia refers to severe difficulty in learning to write, including handwriting.
Dyscalculia refers to severe difficulty in learning mathematical concepts and computations.
Phonemic Awareness: The ability to blend, segment, and manipulate speech sounds (for example, trash has 4 speech sounds or phonemes: t-r-a-s-h).
Alphabetic Principle: Learning how speech maps to print or learning letter-sounds relationships. Understanding letter-sound relationships allows students to decode unknown words by making the speech sounds associated with letters and then blending them together to make a word (c-a-t is cat).
Rapid Naming entails having children quickly name familiar objects, letters, or numbers. These skills are important in building reading frequency.
Students with LD, even those who read fairly well, may have problems with written language. These difficulties can occur in handwriting, spelling, productivity, writing mechanics, organization, and composition.
CHARACTERISITICS
OF STUDENTS WITH
LEARNING DISABILITIE
S
Signals for learning disabilities are characteristics of students with learning disabilities. Because these students are a heterogeneous group, only certain signals will apply to any one student: Has trouble understanding and following directions Has a short attention span; is easily distracted Is overactive and impulsive Has difficulty with handwriting and fine motor activities Has difficulty with visual or auditory sequential memory Has difficulty memorizing words or basic math facts Has difficulty allocating time and organizing work Is unmotivated toward tasks that are difficult Has difficulty segmenting words into sounds and blending sounds Confuses similar letters and words, such as b and d, and was and saw Listens and speaks well but decodes poorly when reading Has difficulty with tasks that require rapid naming of pictures, words,
and numbers Is not efficient or effective in using learning strategies
SIGNALS FOR POSSIBLELEARNING DISABILITIES
Today, more students are identified as having specific learning disabilities than any other type of learning disability. According to the Twenty-Seventh Annual Report to Congress on
the Implementation of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, approximately 9% of school-age children were identified as having disabilities. Just over 47% of this group, or approximately 4% of the school-age
population, were identified as having specific learning disabilities. During the last three decades, the number of students classified
as having LD has increased substantially – more than doubling. The percentage of school-age children identified as having a
learning disabilities varies by state from 1.5% to 5.2%.
PREVALENCE OFLEARNING DISABILITIES
Growing public awareness of LD Greater social acceptance Limited alternatives for other students
at risk Social and cultural influences on
central nervous system integrity Increasing needs for literacy at work
and in daily life
WHY DOES THE PERCENTAGE OF STUDENTS
WITH LD CONTINUE
TO INCREASE?
Most students with LD are identified because of difficulties with academic achievement. Teachers are usually the first professionals to notice learning
strengths and weaknesses. Of all of the members of a pre-referral team, classroom teachers
and parents have the most experience with a student.One of the most important things to do to ensure you are
appropriately referring a student for learning disabilities is to ask yourself the following questions: Have you provided effective instruction? Have you given the student additional support and modifications? Is this student a distinctly different learner than others? Are there other explanations for this student’s learning problems?
IDENTIFICATION AND ASSESSMENTOF CHILDREN WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES
No one approach or technique is appropriate for all students with LD. Effective classroom teachers must use their “best teaching
practices” to teach students with LD.Several common practices associated with academic success
of students with LD include: Controlling task difficulty Teaching in small interactive groups of 6 of fewer students Using graphic organizers and other visual displays to illustrate key
concepts Providing modeling and “think alouds” to demonstrate strategies
and learning practices Teaching students to self-regulate and self-monitor their learning
and to “fix-up” when they have learning problems. Providing opportunities for extended practice with feedback
INSTRUCTIONAL TECHNIQUES & ACCOMMODATIONSFOR STUDENTS WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES
Research on the use of advance organizers, or activities that orient students to the task and the materials, suggests that this is even more important for students with LD, learning problems, or limited background knowledge for the task being taught. A 1983 study found that when content-area teachers in middle
and high schools used advance organizers, students with LD could experience significant improvements in both the quality and quantity of learning.
Three important factors:1.Students with LD are taught how to listen for and use the advance
organizers.2.After using the advance organizer, the teacher and students must
discuss it’s effectiveness.3.Third, before an advance organizer is presented, the teacher must
cue the students that it is going to be used.
USING ADVANCE ORGANIZERS
Students are most successful when they have an idea of where they are going.
PROVIDING A
FRAMEWORK FOR
LEARNING:
STEPS IN USING AN ADVANCE
ORGANIZER
One key to success for students with LD is to make the learning visible. Instead of asking repeatedly, “What is the main
idea of the story?” until students come up with the correct answer, have the students model and discuss the thinking processes, or cognitive strategies, they use to find the main idea of the story.
Teachers and students can use thinking aloud to comment on or make visible their thought processes as they are doing cognitive tasks, such as finding the main idea. Teachers can use discussions, referred to as
instructional conversations, to make visible the thinking processes needed for understanding.
STEPS IN USING THINKING ALOUD& INSTRUCTIONAL CONVERSATIONS
Students with LD need extended practice and additional opportunities to apply their learning to ensure continued mastery. Several instructional principals that are important for students
with learning disabilities are helpful for many students include the following: Using learning tools and aids Adjusting workload and time Presenting and having students demonstrate their learning in multiple
ways Teaching students to use memory strategies
PROVIDING EXTENDED PRACTICE AND APPLICATION
With new technology and its increasing availability, more students with reading, writing and math disabilities are able to overcome their academic problems through the use of technologically based learning tools.
Teachers are better able to organize their classrooms and use technology to facilitate effective cooperative learning activities.
Computers offer a number of tools for students. Some examples are:
Students with handwriting and spelling disabilities have been helped by word processing programs with built-in spell check.
Through speech synthesizers and software, students with reading and writing difficulties have had the opportunity to hear what they write and then to read along with the computer.
Other learning tools that are recommended for students with LD include calculators, spell checkers, tape recorders, and handheld computers.
USING LEARNING
TOOLS & AIDS
Workload adjustments may include: Reducing the amount of work Dividing the work into smaller sections or tasks
It is important to present information in multiple ways when instructing children with learning disabilities. Students with learning disabilities may have difficulty processing
information when it is presented in only one way.
ADJUSTING WORKLOAD AND TIME
Research has consistently demonstrated that students with LD are less effective at employing memory strategies than their peers.
This is particularly important for students with learning disabilities in a general education classroom. Students with learning disabilities may not
automatically use memory strategies such as rehearsing information they are learning, categorizing the information to make it easier to learn, using visual imagery to “see” the information mentally, and using acronyms to remember lists.
TEACHING STUDENTS TO USEMEMORY STRATEGIES
Controlling task difficulty Teaching students with LD in a small interactive groups of six or
less Using combination of direct instructions and cognitive strategy
instructionProviding a framework for learning Modeling process and strategies using thinking aloud and
instructional conversations Teaching self-regulation and self-monitoring Providing opportunities for extended practice and application Using learning tools and aids Adjusting work load and time requirements Presenting information and having students demonstrate
learning in multiple ways Teaching memory strategies
KEY STRATEGIESFOR TEACHING STUDENTS WITH LD
ATTENTION DEFICITHYPERACTIVITY DISORDER
Students with hyperactivity disorder have been identified for well over a century (1902), but only recently have we begun to address the educational implications of their disorder in schools. The terms attention deficit disorder (ADD) and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have been used to describe students with this disability. Parent groups, such as Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorders (CHADD), have applied pressure at the local, state, and national levels so that appropriate educational services would be developed for their children.
Myths and misunderstandings about ADHD: ADHD is not a real disorder and was only drummed up by pharmaceutical or psychiatric
communities. Evidence reports that ADHD is a real disorder.
ADHD is only a childhood disorder. ADHD affects individuals across the lifespan.
ADHD is over-diagnosed and many individuals who are labeled ADHD are not. Though occasional misdiagnosis is possible with all disabilities, prevalence rates for ADHD
vary from 3 to 5% (National Institute of Mental Health) ADHD is likely to result in overmedicating children.
The increase in medication is likely a result of better diagnosis and treatment across the lifespan.
ADHD is a result of poor parenting. ADHD is attributable to genetics in the vast of the majority of cases.
DIAGNOSTIC & STATISTICAL MANUALOF MENTAL DISORDERS
AMERICAN PSYCHIATRIC ASSOCIATION (2002)
The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-IV), which addresses mental health disorders for children and adults, describes ADHD as a general term and subdivides individuals into three categories:
1. ADHD, Predominantly Inattentive Type2. ADHD, Predominantly Hyperactive-Impulsive Type 3. ADHD, Combined Type
Students who display either or both of these characterizes can be indentified as having ADHD.
Evidence to suggest that ADHD often coexists with other conditions such as depression, anxiety, and learning disabilities.
INATTENTION
Inattention refers to consistent (over 6 months) and highly inappropriate levels of at least six of the following behaviors:
Failing to pay close attention to details and making careless mistakes that are inconsistent with the child’s developmental level
Failing to sustain attention to tasks and/or play activities Failing to listen, even when spoken to directly Having difficulty with organization Resisting working on tasks that require sustained attention Losing materials and objects Becoming easily distracted Being forgetful
HYPERACTIVITY – IMPULSIVITY
Hyperactivity-impulsivity refers to consistent (over 6 months) and highly inappropriate levels of at least six of the following behaviors:
Hyperactivity
Fidgeting or squirming Having a difficult time remaining seated during class, even when other students are
able to do so Running or climbing excessively when it is not appropriate Having difficulty playing quietly Acting as though he or she is “driven by a motor” Talking too much
Impulsivity
Blurting out answers Having difficulty waiting for his or her turn Interrupting others or butting into activities
These characteristics of inattention and/or hyperactivity-impulsivity should be present before the age of 7 and in two or more separate settings (e.g. at school and at home).
THREE TYPES OF ADHDAND THE STUDENT
1.ADHD, Predominantly Inattentive Type:Teachers recognize these students as daydreamers who are often forgetful and easily distracted.
2.ADHD, Predominantly Hyperactive-Impulse Type:These students have difficulty sitting still, talk out of turn, are the most challenging to parents and teachers, and are more likely to develop oppositional and defiant disorder or conduct disorder in adolescence.
3.ADHD, Combined Type:These students have features of both inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity. It is estimated that 85% of students with ADHD are the combined type.
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN INATTENTIVE & HYPERACTIVE-IMPULSIVE TYPES OF ADHD
Trait Hyperactive-Impulsive
Type Inattentive Type
Decision Making Impulsive Sluggish
Boundaries Intrusive, rebellious
Honors boundaries,polite, obedient
Assertion Bossy,
irritating Under assertive,
overly polite, docile
Attention Seeking Shows off, egotistical,
best at worst Modest, shy,
socially withdrawn
Popularity Attracts new friends
but doesn’t bond Bonds
but doesn’t attract
Most common diagnosis
Oppositional defiant,conduct disorder
Depression,energy focused in
CHARACTERISTICSOF STUDENTS WITH ADHD
Feeling restless
Blurting out answers
Easily distracted
Poor attention
Rarely completing tasks
Jumping from task to task
Impulsivity
Hyperactivity
Difficulty regulating activity
Poor self control
Little rule-governed behavior
Little executive functioning (ability to regulate thinking and behavior using working
memory, inner speech, and controlling emotions, analyzing problems, and
communicating solutions to peers)
10 THINGS TEENS WITH ADHDWANT TEACHERS TO KNOW
1. I am not stupid. I may need help, even when I do not ask.
2. I need help to organize my work. I may complete work and loose it.
3. ADHD is not an excuse, I do struggle.
4. Sometimes I really do forget things. I’m not trying to be difficult.
5. Talk to me about my behavior in private, do not embarrass me in class.
6. I need help to control my impulsive behavior.
7. I enjoy cooperative learning to help me make and keep friends.
8. I like to stick to a routine.
9. Include me in planning and decision-making. I have feelings.
10. Learn about ADHD, so that you can help me as best as you can and understand
what I go through everyday.
These tips can be found on Page 165 in “Tips for Teachers” 6.6
PREVALENCE OF ADHD
Difficult to determine exact number because students are not
recorded under IDEIA.
Estimated prevalence rate at 3% to 5%.
Higher rate of males than females (3 to 1).
This may be because of the way ADHD is tested and manifested in
the sexes. Girls are less likely to have the hyperactivity part of
ADHD.
Testing for ADHD is based on the way it is presented in boys who
are usually more aggressive and hyperactive than girls, making
girls less likely to be diagnosed.
29.3% of girls have a subtype of inattentive ADHD.
IDENTIFICATION & ASSESSMENTOF STUDENTS WITH ADHD
Diagnosis involves medical evaluation from a pediatrician, psychologist or
psychiatrist
Rating scale used by teachers and parents to rate behavior. Included in rating
scale are: distractibility, restlessness, always up, excitability, impulsiveness,
excessively demining, if unaccepted by peers, no sense of fair game, failure
to finish tasks
Rated on presence of behavior and frequency of occurrence
Used for children aged 6 to 18
Teachers must be culturally sensitive, as some cultures may manifest more
body movement, gesture and expression than others. These may seem to be
behaviors related to ADHD, but it may be based on the students culture and
upbringing and not merit an ADHD diagnosis.
FAPE: Free and Appropriate Public Education
Two federal laws that guarantee a FAPE to children with ADHD are:
Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEIA)
Provides a special education for those students who meet the eligibility criteria for
one or more disability and whose disability adversely affects their educational
performance.
Mandates procedures for identifying students with disabilities and how services
should be provided and monitored.
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (Section 504)
A civil rights statute which requires that schools do not discriminate against
children with disabilities and that they provide children with reasonable
accommodations.
Focuses on equity and access in all areas of life but does not detail how services
will be provided.
ELIGIBILITY FOR ADHD SERVICES & SPECIAL EDUCATION LAW
Teachers who are effective with students with ADHD possess the following characteristics:
Positive attitudes toward inclusion of students with ADHD.
Ability to collaborate as a member of an interdisciplinary team.
Knowledge of behavior management procedures.
Personal characteristics.
Educational interventions for students with ADHD:
Use novelty in instruction and directions.
Maintain a schedule.
Prepare students for transitions and provide support in completing transitions.
Emphasize time limits.
Provide organizational assistance.
Provide rewards consistently and often.
Be brief and clear.
Arrange the environment to facilitate attention.
Provide optimal stimulation.
Allow for movement and postures other than sitting.
Promote active participation through effective questioning techniques.
INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDELINES & ACCOMMODATIONS
FOR ADHD STUDENTS
Professionals like pediatricians, psychologists, and/or psychiatrists may recommend that the student be given medication as one aspect of treatment for ADHD.
Stimulant medication is most typical type of medication, which includes Ritalin.
Other approved drugs: Amphetamine
Methylphenidate
Pemoline
Dextroamphetamine
Dexmethylphenidate
70% to 80% of children with ADHD respond positively to stimulant medications.
MEDICATION FOR ADHD STUDENTS
Please click on the link below to test your knowledge on the information presented in the earlier slides.
Chapter 6 Quiz
CHAPTER 6 - QUIZ
The National Center for Learning Disabilities’ (NCLD) mission is to ensure success for all individuals with learning disabilities in school, at work and in life.
The NCLD:Connects parents and others with resources, guidance and
support so they can advocate effectively for their children. Delivers evidence-based tools, resources and professional
development to educators to improve student outcomes. Develops policies and engages advocates to strengthen
educational rights and opportunities.
http://www.ncld.org/
FOR MORE INFORMATION ONLEARNING DISABILITIES…