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Learning Disabilities For Parents
What is a learning disability?
The term learning disability describes a neurobiological disorder in which a persons brain works or is structured differently. These differences may interfere with his or her ability to think and remember. A variety of motor, social, memory, organizational and attentional problems may also negatively impact academic achievement. Learning disabilities can affect a persons ability to speak, listen, read, write, spell, reason, recall, organize information, and/or do mathematics.
According to the National Institutes of Health, twenty percent of the school population, or one in five Americans, are learning disabled. Learning disabled individuals comprise fifty percent of the special education population in the United States.
Though learning disabilities are common, they are not well understood. This is due, in some measure, to the heterogeneity of the population. Individuals with learning disabilities evidence different characteristics and each individual is unique in displaying only some of these characteristics.
What are the most common learning disabilities?
Dyslexia a language-based disability in which a person has trouble understanding words, sentences, or paragraphs.
Dyscalculia a mathematical disability in which a person has a difficult time solving arithmetic problems and grasping math concepts.
Dysgraphia a writing disability in which a person finds it hard to form letters or write within a defined space.
Auditory and Visual Processing Disabilities sensory disabilities in which a person has difficulty understanding language despite normal hearing and vision.
What areas of learning are affected by learning disabilities?
Receptive language problems (i.e. listening) can cause difficulties within and outside the classroom and often affect social interaction. Verbal dialogue (conversation) or humor may be misunderstood. Listening comprehension deficits are readily observed in oral expressive language, reading comprehension and written expression. Frequently poor auditory perceptual skills are diagnosed in these children and are the contributory factors to receptive language disorders.
Expressive language problems include word finding difficulties, lack of specificity with vocabulary, and an inability to organize thoughts. Individuals with oral language disorders may mispronounce multi-syllabic words, confuse word order (syntax) in sentence structure, substitute pronouns (e.g. "me want") or have difficulty using language socially in context (pragmatics).
Written language problems often affect individuals with reading disorders, and may be displayed through spelling, handwriting, and/or composition. In middle or high school, written language often becomes the more obvious disability.
Mathematics can be another problem academic area for some students with learning disabilities. Specifically, these disabilities may involve deficits in quantitative thinking, numerical reasoning, temporal and spatial concepts and calculation. Memory deficits often inhibit the memorization of math facts.
What are some common signs of learning disabilities?
Preschool
Speaks later than most children do
Pronunciation problems
Slow vocabulary growth, often unable to find the right word
Difficult rhyming words
Trouble learning numbers, alphabet, days of the week, colors, shapes
Extremely restless and easily distracted
Trouble interacting with peers
Difficulty following directions or routines
Fine motor skills slow to develop
Grades K-4
Slow to learn the connection between letters and sounds
Confuses basic words (run, eat, want)
Makes consistent reading and spelling errors including letter reversals (b/d), inversions (m/w), transpositions (felt/left), and substitutions (house/home)
Transposes number sequences and confuses arithmetic signs (+, -, x,/, =)
Slow to remember facts
Slow to learn new skills, relies heavily on memorization
Unstable pencil grip
Trouble learning about time
Poor coordination, unaware of physical surroundings, prone to accidents
Grades 5-8
Reverses letter sequences (soiled/solid, left/felt)
Slow to learn prefixes, suffixes, root words, and other spelling strategies
Avoids reading aloud
Trouble with word problems
Difficulty with handwriting
Awkward, fist-like, or tight pencil grip
Avoids writing compositions
Slow or poor recall of facts
Difficulty making friends
Trouble understanding body language and facial expressions
High School Students & Adults
Continues to spell incorrectly, frequently spell the same word differently in a single piece of writing
Avoids reading and writing tasks
Trouble summarizing
Trouble with open-ended questions on tests
Weak memory skills
Difficulty adjusting to new settings
Works slowly
Poor grasp of abstract concepts
Either pays too little attention to details or focuses on them too much
Misreads information
© 1997, 1998 Charles & Helen Schwab Foundation.
All Rights Reserved
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