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Title: Chapter%205%20Learning%20Disabilities


1
Chapter 5Learning Disabilities
2
Brief History
  • Foundation Phase (1800-1930) basic scientific
    research related to the brain damage to
    specific areas and corresponding losses.
  • Transition Phase (1930-1960) application of
    brain research to children. Similarities between
    characteristic of children with learning problems
    and adults who have suffered brain injury
  • Integration Phase (1960-1974) term LD was
    coined and emphasized perceptual skills

3
Learning Disabilities
  • Term coined in 1963
  • Children who were having serious difficulties in
    learning to read, were hyperactive, or could not
    solve math problems.
  • Parents liked the term and formed the Association
    for Children with Learning Disabilities (now
    ACALD).
  • In 1975 LD was included as a special ed category
    in IDEA.
  • Largest category in special ed.

4
IDEA Definition of Learning Disabilities (LD)
  • A disorder in one or more of the basic
    psychological processes involved in understanding
    or using language
  • May manifest itself in an imperfect ability to
  • Listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do
    math
  • Does not include learning problem that is the
    result of visual, hearing, or motor disabilities,
    of MR, emotional disturbance, or environmental,
    cultural, economical disadvantage.

5
The NJCLD Definition of LD
  • A general term that refers to a group of
    disorders manifested by significant difficulties
    in the acquisition and use of listening,
    speaking, reading, writing, reasoning, or math
    abilities
  • Problems with self-regulatory behaviors, social
    perception, and social interaction may coexist
    but do not themselves constitute a learning
    disability
  • Although learning disabilities may occur with
    other handicapping conditions or with extrinsic
    influences they are not the result of those
    influences
  • Why has the concept of LD proven so difficult to
    define?

6
Why so difficult?
  • Different kinds of academic skills student are
    expected to learn
  • Wide-range of differences among learners
  • No large group of children are expected to learn
    at the same rate
  • Definition provides no info on how to teach a
    particular student
  • Better to spend time developing and delivering
    effective instruction than debating over a
    definition

7
Operationalizing the Definition
  • Most states require three criteria be met to
    receive services
  • Discrepancy between intelligence and achievement
  • An unexpected difference between general
    ability and achievement
  • Exclusion criterion
  • LD can occur with other disabilities but the
    learning problems must not be primarily the
    result of the other disability or other
    condition (e.g., low SES)
  • A need for special education services
  • The student shows specific and severe learning
    problems despite normal educational efforts

8
Identifying Students
  • Response to Intervention (RTI) Process to
    determine learning disabilities based on the
    students response to scientific, research-based
    interventions.
  • Standardized Testing Intelligence and
    achievement tests.
  • Associated with problems in listening, reasoning,
    memory, attention, selecting and focusing on
    relevant stimuli, and perception and processing
    of specific information.

9
Characteristics
  • Students with LD experience one or more of the
    following difficulties
  • Reading problems - 90 of all children identified
  • Deficits in written language - Perform lower
    across most written expression tasks
  • Underachievement in math - 50 have math IEP
    goals
  • Poor social skills - 75 have social skills
    deficits
  • Behavioral problems
  • Defining Characteristic
  • Specific and significant achievement deficits in
    the presence of adequate overall intelligence

10
Prevalence
  • LD is by far the largest of all special education
    categories
  • 51 of all children with disabilities receive
    services under the LD category
  • 5 out of every 100 students in the U.S. is
    diagnosed with LD
  • Males with LD outnumber females by 3-to-1
  • The number of children identified is growing

11
Question
  • Do most students who are identified as learning
    disabled have a true disability? Or are they just
    poor achievers or victims of poor instruction?

12
Answer
  • Probably both
  • School defined phenomenon
  • The process of learning academic skills is not
    fundamentally different from learning other
    skills so while LR as specific to certain
    skills, individuals may have difficulties in
    learning across a variety of settings and
    situations.
  • Difficulties in school will not magically
    disappear after graduation

13
Causes
  • In almost every case the cause is unknown
  • Brain damage or dysfunction (CNS)
  • In most cases there is no evidence of brain
    damage
  • Heredity
  • There is growing evidence that genetics may
    account for at least some family linkage with
    dyslexia
  • Biochemical imbalance
  • Flavorings/colors
  • Synthesize vitamins
  • Most professionals give little credence to
    biochemical imbalance as a cause
  • Environmental factors
  • Impoverished living conditions early in a childs
    life and poor instruction probably contribute to
    achievement deficits
  • Many students learning problems can be
    remediated by direct, intensive, and systematic
    instruction

14
Problem
  • What is the problem of placing too much emphasis
    on theories linking LD to brain damage
    dysfunction?

15
Problem
  • Not all children with LD display clinical
    evidence of brain damage and not all children
    with LD have brain damage
  • Built-in excuse for ineffective instruction
  • Etiology will not alter the methods of teaching
    the student

16
Assessment
  • Five forms of assessment are frequently used
  • Standardized tests
  • Used to measure achievement and IQ
  • Criterion-referenced tests
  • Students score compared to a mastery criterion
    to identify specific skills in need of
    instruction
  • Informal reading inventories
  • Used to determine students reading level
  • Curriculum-based measurement
  • Frequent assessment of a students progress in
    learning the objectives of the curriculum
  • Direct daily measurement
  • Observing and recording a childs performance on
    a specific skill each day it is taught

17
Educational Approaches
  • Difficulty organizing information of their own
  • Limited background knowledge to many academic
    activities
  • Do not approach learning tasks in effective and
    efficient way

18
Educational Approaches
  • Explicit/Direct instruction
  • Provide a sufficient range of examples to
    illustrate a concept
  • Provide models of proficient performance
  • Have students explain how and why they make
    decisions
  • Provide frequent, positive feedback for student
    performance
  • Provide adequate practice opportunities
  • Content enhancements (organization, comprehension
    and retention)
  • Guided notes
  • Graphic organizers and visual displays
  • Mnemonics
  • Learning strategies
  • Students use task-specific strategies to guide
    themselves successfully through a learning task
    or problem

19
Educational Placement Alternatives
  • Regular classroom
  • During the 99-00 school year, 45 of students
    with LD were educated in regular classrooms
  • Some school districts employ a collaborative
    teaching model to support the full inclusion of
    students with LD
  • Consultant teacher
  • Provides support to regular classroom teachers
    who work directly with students with learning
    disabilities
  • Resource room
  • A resource room is a specially staffed and
    equipped classroom where students with LD come
    for one or several periods during the school day
    to receive individualized instruction

20
Current Issues and Future Trends
  • The discussion and debate over what constitutes a
    true learning disability are likely to continue
  • Most professionals and advocates for students
    with LD do not support full inclusion
  • Students with LD possess positive attributes and
    interests that teachers should identify and try
    to strengthen

21
Eckert et al. (2002)
  • Purpose Whether the effectiveness of an
    antecedent intervention could be enhanced by
    combining with either of two consequences
    reinforcement and feedback.
  • Participants 6 elementary school students.
    Experienced reading difficulties.
  • Dependent measure Number of words read correctly
    per minute

22
Eckert et al. (2002)
  • Independent Variables
  • Antecedent intervention Listening passage
    preview and repeated readings
  • AI and Contingent reinforcement Preferred item
    delivered contingent upon accuracy (improvement)
  • AI and Performance feedback Setting goals,
    information about performance, and graphing
  • Results
  • Combination of AI CR or PF was more effective
    than AI alone.
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