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Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for a lifetime. If you teach a student with learning disabilities a fact, you help the student for the moment. But if you teach that student how to learn, you help the student for a lifetime. Donald Deshler

Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

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Page 1: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

Learning Disabilities within

the ClassroomIf you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a

man how to fish, you feed him for a lifetime. If you teach a student with learning disabilities a fact, you help the student for the moment. But if

you teach that student how to learn, you help the student for a lifetime.Donald Deshler

Page 2: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

Language is a wondrous thing –

it has been said that language is what makes human beings Human….A language disorder is a nonvisible entity. It cannot be seen in the same manner that a crippling defect of the boy can be seen. Yet its effects are more pervasive and insidious than other physical impairments.

Hal McGrady

This is very true for most learning issues. Most learning issues are “invisible” as they fall outside of the “norm” for learning.

Page 3: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

What is a Learning Disability??

Refers to a neurobiological disorder in which one or more of the basic processes involved in understanding spoken or written language. It may influence the ability to speak, listen read, write, spell, reason organize information, understand consequences of actions, or do mathematical calculations.

There is a discrepancy between how smart the student is (the potential of the student) and how well they are doing in class (the achievement).

Page 4: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

Often frustrated, seen as lazy and as not trying

Page 5: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

With understanding and effort remediation can help to change the course of a child’s life

but requirespatience

consistency – home and schoolunderstanding

knowledge

Page 6: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

What are the types of issues

Dyslexia Aphasia

Dysgraphia Central Auditory Processing Disorder

Dyscaculia Visual Processing Disorder

ADHD,AD/HD,ADHD

Dyspraxia Non-verbal Learning Disorder

Dysphasia Executive Functioning

Page 7: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

Will it go away………………

Some times it is outgrown as the child matures, the neurobiology may correct itselfHowever….Most likely the child learns compensatory skills…..if they are gifted, they teach themselves

Most often, they need specialized assistance from a teacher or trained professional

Early intervention is essential and works best as much is dependent on repetition and the creation of correct habits

PERFECT PRACTICE MAKES PERFECT not Practice makes perfect

Page 8: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

Is testing needed???

Professional testing can assist you to more accurately assess the problems a student isfacing It helps to understand why the child feels frustrated and to help them cope

An Ex:The knight road out into the nightAnd turned to the right to attend the riteThat he thought was his right Where he learned to writeWith the wheelwrights

What is frustrating about this ????

Page 9: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

What can the classroom teacher do to help

Taken from Math Intervention and the Promise of Adaptive Learning

Not all student learn at the same rateNot all students learn the same way visual learners kinesthetic verbal auditory Examples from history: Cher Albert Einstein Thomas Edison Beethoven

Page 10: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

Intervention is proactive ……….not reactive Parents know their children and teachers know their students Trust the instincts

Talented students need intervention opportunities to be accelerated beyond the curriculum and to move at a pace that challenges their abilities – these are often the neglected ones because they learn easily and keep up but boredom can be an issue – can look like ADD/ADHD

Intervention is about teaching and providing opportunities to learn – it should ever be deficit model

Intervention can provide opportunities for remediation and skill building and strengths can be identified and enhanced

Intervention discovers what works best for the individual student. Alternatives can be tried until the one that works is discovered

And sometimes a nap works best…………….

Page 11: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

Strong curriculum and a strong educational philosophy that is child-centered ensures the desired learning outcomes are achieved

The teaching of compensatory skills works for all students not just those experiencing learning differences

Build a foundation of understanding and skills; immersing them in lessons buildingunderstanding and knowledge lesson designs need to build accuracy, efficiency and understanding lessons need to provide regular practice leading to automaticity of response as confidence grows empower the student to make self-directed choices

BEWARE LEARNED HELPLESSNESS

An effective curriculum is aligned to standards and benchmarks also needs to have a research based understanding of how the progression and comprehension of learning occurs students who struggle often need more time. Flexible, dynamic lessons paths need to be adapted to fit individual needs. Learning needs to be FUNdamental as boring leads to increased acting out

Page 12: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

Make connections explicit. Wherever possible provide multi-modal lessons that combine a variety of ways of learning (eg. Kinesthetic and visual). In the beginning, the more concrete the lesson, the better. Abstract connections come later

Provide a wide variety of ways of learning (eg., making models, reading, dictating stories)These need to be adapted to the student’s individual needs

Build on prior knowledge. Instruction should always connect new knowledge to old andbuild on what a child already knows. Standard is 75% review and 25% new for each lesson with the beginning of each lesson being a review of what was known already. We learn best when we build on what we already know

Build a vocabulary for every subject so the student has a context for understanding. Every subject has unique vocabulary – we cannot make assumptions of understanding

Integrate instruction and assessment in order to quickly identify learning gaps and to determine where the lesson plans need to be changed to accommodate student learning continual assessment allows the student to focus on what s/he needs to learn allows a better understanding of how a student approaches learning and how to adjust for strengths an weaknesses

MISTAKES ARE OPPORTUNITIES FOR LEARNING – SEE THEM AS SUCH

Page 13: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

KNOW YOUR STUDENTS

KNOW THEIR STRENGTHS

KNOW AREAS FOR IMPROVEMENT

TEACHERS MAKE THE DIFFERENCE

Page 14: Learning Disabilities within the Classroom If you give a starving man a fish, you feed him for a day. But if teach a man how to fish, you feed him for

REFERENCES:

Lerner, Janet and Johns, Beverly: Learning Disabilities and Related Mild Disabilities

www.friends of quinn.com

http://Idanatl.org/aboutld/teachers/understanding/strategies.asp

http://www.as.wv.edu/-scidis/learning.html

http://www.ldinfo.com/executive_functioning.htm

Move to Learn LD Profile Test by Barbara Pheloung (2006)

Learning Disabilities Association of Americahttp://www.ldanatl.org

National Association of School Psychologists