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SPECIFIC LEARNING ABILITIES AND STRATEGIES

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Title: SPECIFIC LEARNING ABILITIES AND STRATEGIES


1
SPECIFIC LEARNING ABILITIES AND STRATEGIES
2
  • specific learning abilities refers to an
    individual's capacity to participate successfully
    in certain aspects of the learning task or in
    certain types of learning

3
Considerations In Assessment Of Specific Learning
Abilities
  • Purposes
  • to determine the student's strengths and
    weaknesses in various types and methods of
    learning
  • basic psychological processes refers to learning
    abilities such as attention, perception and memory

4
federal guidelines specified three criteria for
eligibility
  • severe discrepancy between achievement and
    intellectual ability must be documented
  • discrepancy must exist despite the provision of
    appropriate learning experiences
  • discrepancy cannot be the result of other
    disabilities or conditions or of environmental,
    cultural, or economic disadvantage

5
Issues And Trends
  • definition of learning disabilities
  • appropriate procedures for the assessment
  • effective strategies for educational intervention

6
Current Practices
  • team assessment
  • screening
  • violation procedures

7
Sources Of Information About Specific Learning
Abilities
  • school records
  • the student
  • teachers
  • parents

8
Screening For Sensory Impairments
  • vision
  • hearing
  •  

9
Screening For Learning Disabilities
  • The Learning Disability Evaluations Scale Reform
    (LDES-R)
  • teacher rated frequency (rarely to all or most of
    the time)
  • seven subscales include listening, thinking,
    speaking, reading, writing, and spelling,
    mathematical calculations
  •  
  • Learning Disabilities Diagnostic Intervention
    (LDDI)
  • listening, speaking, reading, writing,
    mathematics, and reasoning

10
Measures Of Perceptual Motor Skills And Other
Specific Learning Abilities
  • specific abilities are difficult to delimit and
    define b/c based on inferences about mental
    processes
  • impossible to observe or measure directly how a
    person perceives incoming sensory information
  • you can only study the persons overt responses
    and report these experiences 

11
  • Perception is a process of comprehending
    information received by the senses
  • or the psychological ability to process or use
    the information received through the senses

12
  • motor proficiency involves evaluating the
    efficiency of movements controlled by the body's
    muscles
  • fine motor addresses movement and response speed
    controlled by the small muscles of the body and
    includes hand and finger dexterity
  • gross motor refers to movement controlled by the
    large muscles of the body including those that
    regulate walking, throwing, catching, and
    balancing

13
  • perceptual motor integration process of
    coordinating sensory information with
    corresponding body movements
  • visual motor processing refers to coordinating
    sensory information from the eyes and
    corresponding movement such as eye-hand
    coordination and visual-motor control
  • auditory motor processing is coordinating sensory
    information from the ears with fine and gross
    motor body movements

14
  • memory is the ability to recall previously
    learned information
  • long-term memory ability
  • short-term memory - influences long-term
  • attention is a process whereby an individuals
    awareness is directed toward some stimulus or set
    of stimulus or the process of selectively
    bringing relevant stimuli into focus (Kirk and
    Chalfont)

15
  • Information processing is the set of abilities
    that govern the way people receive and respond
    incoming information
  • Major component reception of information,
    association of the incoming information with
    previously stored information, and expression

16
Test Of Perception
  • usually focus on either auditory or visual
    perception rather than the perceptual process as
    a whole
  • discrimination is the ability to detect
    likenesses and differences among stimuli, and
  • figure ground discrimination is the ability to
    differentiate relevant stimuli from irrelevant
    stimuli
  • spatial relationships refers to the perception of
    the relative positions of objects in space,
  • form perception is concerned with the size,
    shape, and position of visual stimuli
  • auditory perception concerned with auditory
    discrimination, and auditory blending

17
  • Developmental Test Of Visual Perception - DTVP-2
  • eye hand coordination - drawing straight, curved,
    and guidelines within increasingly difficult
    boundaries
  • position in space - discriminating and matching
    the areas figures that appear in rotated and
    reversed positions
  • copying - copying increasingly complex figures
    from model figure ground - finding geometric
    shapes hidden within a complex background
  • spatial relations -producing model patterns by
    connecting dots on a blank grid of dots
  • visual closure - viewing a geometric figure
    selecting matching figure from a series of
    figures with missing parts
  • visual motor speed - drawing special marks in
    selecting geometric designs on a page filled with
    various patterns
  • form constancy - identifying geometric shapes
    displayed in different sizes, shading, and
    positions
  •  

18
  • Motor Free Visual Perception Test Revised MVPT-R
  • Auditory Perception Goldman-Fristoe-Woodcock Test
    of Auditory Discrimination
  • wake, rake, Lake, make

19
Test Of Motor Skills
  • Bruininks-Oseretsky Test of Motor Proficiency
    individual, norm-referenced test, 4 to 14
  • gross motor skills
  • running speed and agility
  • balance
  • bilateral coordination
  • strength
  • gross and fine motor skills
  • upper limb coordination
  • fine motor skills
  • response speed
  • visual motor control
  • upper limb speed and dexterity

20
  • Developmental Test Of Visual Motor Integration
  • contains 24 geometric forms that have to be
    copied by the student
  • scoring is complicated it is pass/fail according
    to the criteria
  • example provided the manual to pass the form
    called vertical horizontal cross the students
    drawing must contain 2 lines that are fully
    intersecting and continuous, and at least
    one-half of each line must be within 20 degrees
    of its correct orientation

21
Measures Of Memory And Attention
  • memory can be described in several ways
  • types information to be recalled
  • time since our original learning
  • type of memory
  • organization of recall

22
Test Of Memory and Learning TOMAL
  • verbal memory index
  • nonverbal memory index
  • delayed recall index
  • sequential recall index
  • free recall index
  • associated recall index
  • learning index
  • attention-concentration index
  • difficult to measure memory because the learner's
    attention cannot be separated from the task
  • inability to isolate attention from other
    factors, attention is often assessed informally
    through observations

23
Test Batteries For Specific Ability Of Assessment
  • Detroit Test Of Learning Aptitude (DTLA 4th
    edition)
  • Illinois Test Of Psycholinguistic Abilities

24
  • DTLA 4th edition
  • young children to adults, fifty minutes to two
    hours,assesses three domains linguistic,
    attentional, and motoric
  • word opposite
  • design sequences
  • sentence imitation
  • reverse letters
  • story construction
  • design reproduction
  • basic information
  • symbolic relations
  • word sequences
  • story sequences
  •  

25
Intelligence Test As Measures Of Specific
Cognitive Abilities
  • results of these test are sometimes used to
    provide information about student specific
    learning abilities
  •  

26
Assessment Of Learning Strategies
  • learning strategies are the methods of students
    employee when faced with a learning task
  • in recent years interest the shifting from
    studying the isolated specific abilities to
    consideration of learning strategies

27
Research Findings
  • Many students with learning disabilities
  • inefficient and ineffective strategies for
    learning
  • tend to recall less information than students
    without
  • approach learning tasks differently and are less
    likely to engage in active rehearsal during
    studying. 
  • unable to create and apply an appropriate
    strategy to a novel problem
  • difficulty with note-taking, attention to
    teachers statements, listening comprehension,
    scanning of textbook passages, monitoring of
    writing errors, and test taking skills

28
  • Strategy Instruction Model by Deshler
  • assesses the students current strategies learning
  • acquisition strategies,
  • storage strategies,
  • studies for the demonstration and expression of
    knowledge 

29
Approaches To Assessment
  • new in the field of special education
  • term learning strategies usually reserved for the
    general cognitive strategies that students apply
    to task in which learning is expected strategies
    for the deployment of attention, for their
    personal skills, and information to be learned,
    for generating and evaluating solutions to
    problems and so forth

30
  • study skills are more closely tied it is to
    specific school task and often require a less
    rudimentary proficiency in learning and writing
  • evaluation of study habits can provide insight
    into the ways a student interacts with a learning
    task
  • students work habits are observed within the
    context of classroom
  • specific questions are asked of students about a
    particular task
  • gathers information about previewing, organizing,
    and problem solving, and rehearsing

31
  • Study Skills Counseling Evaluation SSCE
  • 50 items assessed in study skill areas
  • study time distribution
  • study conditions
  • taking notes
  • preparing and taking examinations
  • other habits attitudes
  • the most common problems identified by students
    in the study were in the areas of memory and
    selective attention
  • 45 of them said that a lot of times I do
    things too fast without thinking 

32
Discrepancy Analysis
  • traditional methods of discrepancy analysis
  • years below grade level procedure
  • expectancy formulas to estimate the students
    expected level of achievement

33
  • Standards or methods of discrepancy analysis
    simplest method is to subtract one score from
    another yielding what is called a difference
    score
  • following the districts guidelines determine how
    much discrepancy has to be exhibited

34
  • Test with built-in discrepancy analysis systems
    measures of ability and achievement that have
    built-in procedures for determining the
    discrepancy
  • many have computer programs which will help the
    scoring and analysis
  • Woodcock Johnson or
  • Wechsler Tests
  • WIAT compared to the WISC-III

35
Answering The Assessment Questions
  • types of procedures
  • nature of the assessment task
  • documentation of specific learning abilities and
    strategies
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