A learning disability is any of a diverse group of conditions that cause significant difficulties in perceiving, processing and/or producing either auditory, visual and/or spatial information. Of presumed neurological origin, it covers disorders that impair such functions as reading (dyslexia), writing (dysgraphia) and mathematical calculation (dyscalcula). Difficulties experienced may include problems with word recognition, aspects of reading comprehension, aspects of writing and/or spelling. The exact nature, range and extent of these difficulties will vary from one case to another as will the actual learning profile or style.
A learning disability may exist in the presence of average to superior intelligence and adequate sensory and motor systems, as evidenced by the extraordinary achievements of numerous people with learning disabilities. Albert Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, Thomas Edison are just some prominent individuals with dyslexia. However, the condition has only recently been identified and it still often goes undiagnosed. That is why it is often misunderstood by people with learning disabilities themselves, as well as others, as intellectual deficiency, which it emphatically is not.
In fact, the marked discrepancy between intellectual capacity and achievement is what characterises a learning disability. Assessment of the disability is required not only to establish the need for special services, but to determine the kind of special services that are required. Thus, it may be appropriate to refer for assessment students who are believed to have a learning disability that has not been previously or reliably identified.
In working with a student with a learning disability, it is important to identify the nature of the disability in order to determine the kind of strategies that might accommodate it. Drawing upon the student's own experience offers invaluable clues to the types of adaptation that work.
While a learning disability cannot be ‘cured’, it can be circumvented by various lecturing strategies. In general, a variety of instructional modes enhances learning for students with learning disabilities, as for others, by allowing them to master material that may be inaccessible in one particular form.
Study skills courses covering note-taking, efficient reading strategies, reading comprehension, brain-storming, essay-planning, study and revision planning, all help to reduce anxiety and improve performance of students with dyslexia, as with the general student population.
Below are some of the difficulties experienced by students with learning disabilities, together with suggested strategies for making material more accessible to them. Much of what follows is based on a booklet published by the Association for Children and Adults with Learning Disabilities from whom further advice and information may be sought.
Some students may experience difficulty integrating information presented orally, hindering their ability to follow the sequence and organisation of a lecture. The following may help; · Provision of a course syllabus at the start of term outlining lectures at the start and writing new terms and key points on the board. · Periodic summaries of the lecture so far and summaries at appropriate points in the course. · In dealing with abstract concepts, paraphrase them in specific terms and illustrate them with concrete examples, with personal experiences, with hands-on models and such visual structures as charts and graphs.
Many students with dyslexia experience word-recognition difficulties and some find it difficult to keep their place in dense text. These difficulties, together with poor reading speed and poor memory, result in reading comprehension problems. Thus, use of library materials, references and digesting large quantities of text become obstacles. Extra time and effort may be required to digest a text fully. For such a student, comprehension and speed are improved dramatically with the provision of auditory formats. The following suggestions may help;
Some students with dyslexia have poor auditory sequential memory which makes rote learning and the execution of complicated tasks difficult. The following may help…
Many students with dyslexia have difficulty preparing written work. Difficulties include poor handwriting, misspelling, poor sentence structure, poor punctuation, misuse of connecting words and omission of suffixes and prefixes. Handwriting may show letter reversal, mid-word capitalisations to disambiguate similar letters (e.g. B/D not b/d) and handwriting may deteriorate readily under pressure. Spelling may exhibit transposition of letters, failure to apply common rules and the omission of prefixes and suffixes. Students may habitually avoid words they cannot spell. All these have clear implications for style, order, structure and fluency. Consequently, a student's written work may not be a true or fair reflection of their ability or mastery of the course. Allowing students to use the following appropriate tools and assistance may permit a student to demonstrate comprehension of the course material.
As outlined above, some students with learning disabilities need alternative ways to take notes because they cannot write effectively or assimilate, remember and organise the material while listening to a lecture. The following suggestions may help;
A laboratory can be especially overwhelming for students with learning disabilities. New equipment, exact measurement and multi-step procedures may demand precisely those skills that are hardest for them to acquire. The following suggestions may ease the burden…
Some students with learning disabilities may have poor coordination or trouble judging distance or differentiating between left and right. Such devices as demonstrations from the student's right-left frame of reference and the use of colour codes or supplementary symbols may overcome the perceptual problem.
Because of a long and painful history of struggling with their difficulties, apparent under-achievement and continued experience of ‘failure’, students with dyslexia often have low self-esteem and lack confidence in themselves and their abilities. If the source of their difficulties has not been identified, or identified only recently, students may be experiencing anxiety and frustration. They may have acquired a reputation for laziness or being difficult, disruptive or un-cooperative. Students that have not been assessed are often afraid of being assessed for fear what they might find out about themselves. Mature students might fit into this category.
Even when students have made significant progress in overcoming their difficulties, low self-esteem and self-confidence may remain. The following suggestions may help…
A learning disability may affect the way a student should be evaluated. In many cases, written work will not be a true or fair indication of a student's ability, their mastery of material or their depth of understanding. If so, a special arrangement may be necessary. Some tasks may be deemed to be an essential part of a course and may not be readily modified. The following suggestions may help…
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