LEARNING DISABILITIES By: Colleen Langlands. LEARNING DISABILITIES Learning Disability: - A...
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Transcript of LEARNING DISABILITIES By: Colleen Langlands. LEARNING DISABILITIES Learning Disability: - A...
LEARNING DISABILITIES
By: Colleen Langlands
LEARNING DISABILITIES
Learning Disability: - A classification that includes several areas of functioning in which a person has difficulty learning in a typical manner, usually caused by an unknown factor or factors. - Often used interchangeably with the terms learning disorder and learning difficulty
LEARNING DISABILITIES
What are they?
TYPES OF LEARNING DISABILITIES Dyslexia – Reading based Inability to work with, notice, or think
about individual sounds in words Detecting and discriminating differences
in speech sounds Difficulty with fluency, rate of reading,
decoding, rhyming, spelling, vocabulary, comprehension, and written expression.
Dyscalculia – Math based Difficulty with counting, learning number
facts, and doing math calculations Difficulty with measurement, telling time,
counting money, and estimating number quantities.
Trouble with mental-math and problem solving abilities.
Dysgraphia – Writing based, often crosses with Dyslexia and Dyscalculia Tight, awkward pencil grip and body position Tiring quickly while writing, and avoiding writing or
drawing tasks Trouble forming letters as well as inconsistent space
between letters Difficulty with syntax structure and grammar Trouble keeping track of thoughts already written
down
Auditory Processing Deficit – Weakness in the ability to process and use auditory information Ability to notice, compare, and distinguish separate
sounds Ability to pick out distinct sounds from a noisy
background Ability to understand and recall the order of sounds
and words Ability to take what they hear and put it on paper
TYPES OF LEARNING DISABILITIES Visual Processing Deficit – Weakness in the ability to understand and use visual information Ability to notice and compare the difference
between items and distinguish them from each other
Ability to distinguish a shape or drawing from it’s background
Ability to see and distinguish the order of words, symbols, or images
Ability to know what an object is while only seeing parts of it
Non-Verbal Learning Disabilities Math computation and problem solving Visual-Spatial tasks and motor coordination Reading body language and seeing social cues
Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder A brain-based disorder that results in
significant inattention, hyperactivity, distractibility or any combination thereof.
Estimated that up to 1/3 of people who have LD also have ADHD
The disorder is linked to genetics and brain structure/function
Executive Functioning Deficits Weakness in the ability ro plan, organize,
strategize, remember details and manage time and space efficiently
.
DIAGNOSING LEARNING
DISABILITIES
GETTING THE STUDENT HELP As a teacher, you cannot officially diagnose a child who is exhibiting exceptional difficulty with anything talked about thus far. This is for those with specific training in these areas, such as a speech and language pathologist, therapist, etc.
Using regular formatives designed to specifically find those students who may have LD issues is a very good way to get a foot in the door of helping your students
These formative can show the progress or lackthereof in specific content areas, such as letter formation, retention, recall, and various other issues.
By taking track and keeping these formatives, or in the case of language issues, writing everything down for later use, you as a teacher are setting up a first-hand testimony towards the student actually needing help or being behind.
CREATING AN LD FRIENDLY TEACHING AND LEARNING
ENVIROMENT
As we all know, the setup and inclusivity of your classroom greatly affects your students learning, retention, and focus. This is especially the case for students who suffer from learning disabilities.
-Decorate in some capacity. Often, bare walls are more distracting than a flurry of posters. Blank rooms remind people of doctors offices or other unpleasant places. They’re boring, and often too bright. By decorating with a few posters or pictures or bookcases, students have something to focus on if they become nervous or anxious. Colors like blue and green will calm anxious or fidgety students, while red, yellow, and orange will energize those more lethargic
Explain things in as many different ways as you can think up. Everyone learns differently.
One o the easiest ways to be inclusive of kids with learning disabilities,, especially is dyslexia, is as simple as changing your font: Comic sans is a font that is known as the most dyslexic friendly font there is. The letters are not direct mirrors, which lessens the tendency to flip them by the brain. For example:
q p
l I
d b
WORKS CITED
Bucholz, J. L., & Sheffler, J. L. (2009). Creating a Warm and Inclusive Environment: Planning for All Children to Feel Welcome.
National Center for Learning Disabilities. (2014). The State of Learning Disabilities. (Third Edition). New York, NY, USA. Retrieved from https://www.ncld.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/11/2014-State-of-LD.pdf
Ormrod, J. E., & Jones, B. D. (2015). Essentials of Educational Psychology. Pearson Education, Inc.