Midterm Study Guide - Working
Midterm Study Guide - Working
Disability as a Minority
o Like other historically under-represented groups, people with
disabilities comprise a minority group.
o People with disabilities often face barriers are handicapped
because of discrimination and unfair treatment
o Similarities with other minority groups in America
Civil rights movement of 1950s and 1960s
Protected under the constitution
Thurgood Marshall
21 years for disability discrimination to pass
Defacto versus dejure segregation
De Jure segregation
Segregation by law
separate but equal
Segregation allowed as long as equal rights
Occupational therapy
Nutrition
Medical
Social work
Vocational education
Rehabilitation counseling
Parent counseling
School nurse services
Successful Partnerships
Family participation
Individualized education programs (IEP)
Collaboration
Consultative services
Exceptionality across the Life Span
Infants, Toddlers, and Preschoolers With Special Needs
o Individualized Family Service Plan (IFSP)
o Early Intervention (EI) (birth to age 2)
o Early childhood special education (age 3-5)
Adolescents and Young Adults With Disabilities
o Transition
o Transition services
o Individualized Transition Plan (ITP)
o Transition challenges and concerns
Learning Objectives:
Chapter Outline:
I.
Key ideas reflected throughout the textbook:
a.
b.
c.
i.
i.
II.
a.
Exceptional children
i.
b.
Disability
1.
The term disability is the limitation or inability to
perform a task in a certain way. For example, a
person may have paralysis of the leg muscles,
cognitive impairments, loss of sight or hearing,
emotional disturbances, or learning difficulties.
ii. Handicap
1.
The term handicap refers to the problems or
difficulties that a person with a disability may
encounter because of their disability, for example, a
building that isnt wheelchair accessible, a building
with Braille signs posted far into a building, or
marginalization and discrimination due to negative
social attitudes.
Classroom Suggestions
i.
III.
a.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
vi.
vii.
viii.
IV.
Important
a.
Developmental Delay
i.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
i.
i.
i.
i.
V.
a.
Federal categories
1)
2)
3)
4)
Autism
Deaf-blindness
Developmental delay
Emotional disturbance
VI.
5) Hearing impairments
6) Mental retardation [Intellectual disability]
7) Multiple disabilities
8) Orthopedic impairments
9) Other health impairments
10) Specific learning disabilities
11) Speech or language impairments
12) Traumatic brain injury
13) Visual impairments including blindness
b.
Pros and cons to using labels to identify people
c. Increase in number of students receiving special education
services
Prevalence of Children and Young Adults with Disabilities
a.
b.
VII.
VIII.
ii.
Multidisciplinary teams
1.
Mandated by PL 94-142 and IDEA (2004).
Multidisciplinary teams are typically formed of
professionals across various disciplines that
independently conduct their own evaluations.
Parents may meet with each expert separately to
receive information and suggestions. This type of
team is not as collaborative as other types of teams.
Interdisciplinary teams
1.
Interdisciplinary teams evolved from the fragmented
approach of multidisciplinary teams. Team members
conduct their evaluations separately but the program
d.
e.
IX.
a.
b.
i.
ii.
iii.
Definitions
Quiz
1. The term handicapism describes the unequal and differential treatment experienced by those with a
disability. True
2. Contemporary thinking believes that services should be provided in the most natural or normalized
environment appropriate for each individual student. True
3. A disability is not necessarily a handicap. True
4. An individualized transition plan is different from the IEP in that is does not require goals. False
5. High school students with disabilities are entitled to a transition plan. True
6. Recreational therapy is considered to be a related service. True
7. Cooperative teaching, or co-teaching as it is sometimes called, is an increasingly popular approach for
facilitating successful inclusion. True
8. A concern associated with alternative teaching is that not all students receive all of the critical content.
False
9. Authorities agree the practice of labeling students is the most effective method of providing services.
False
10. Gifted and talented students are classified in a separate category under IDEA. False
11. Disability is defined as an inability or a reduced capacity to perform a task in a specific way.
12. Handicap refers to the impact or consequence of a disability, not the condition.
13. A way of ensuring participation in the general curriculum as required by PL108-446 (IDEA -2004) is the
concept of universal design.
14. The reauthorization responsible for rapid development of services for youngsters with disabilities,
delayed or at risk is PL 99-457.
15. Special education is defined as a customized instructional program designed to meet the unique needs
of an individual learner.
16. Which of the following special education pioneers is considered the father of special education. Izard
17. Key ingredients required for successful cooperative teaching include
Voluntary participation
Adequate planning time
Mutual respect
18. Similar to an IEP, the IFSP is more family focused and reflective of the familys resources, priorities, and
concerns.
19. In this model, team members are committed to working collaboratively across individual discipline lines.
Transdisciplinary Approach
20. In this model of teaming, recommendations are the result of information sharing and joint planning.
Interdisciplinary Approach
21. Services for young children are covered under Part C of IDEA.
22. Prevalence refers to the total number of individuals with a particular disability existing in the population
at a given time.
23. The statement, last year 500,000 new cases of autism were recorded is an example of incidence.
24. Noncategorical programs:
Focus on the instructional needs of the pupils
Do not focus on the etiology of the disability
25. Exceptional children are individuals who resemble other children in many ways but differ from societal
standards of normalcy.
Additional Exercise
PowerPoint Slides
Chapter Summary
Legislation impacting the practice and pedagogy of students with disabilities are highlighted, including
major national and state regulations as well as civil rights legislation. These important laws paved the way
for inclusion of students with disabilities and outline the identification and assessment process.
In addition, this chapter describes the design and implementation of individual education plans as well as
service delivery options; including a focus on full inclusion and the regular education initiative.
Learning Objectives:
Identify the court cases that led to the enactment of Public Law 94142.
Summarize the key components of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act from 1975 to
2004.
Describe the legislative intent of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 and the Americans
with Disabilities Act.
Distinguish between inter- and intra-individual differences.
Describe the difference between norm- and criterion-referenced assessments.
Outline the steps in the referral process for the delivery of special education services.
List the key components of an individualized education program (IEP) and an individualized family
service plan (IFSP).
Define mainstreaming, least restrictive environment, regular education initiative, and full inclusion.
Chapter Outline:
I.
Key Special Education court cases
a.
b.
c.
States must guarantee a free public education to all children with mental
retardation ages 6-21 and younger if school districts provide services to preschool
age children without disabilities.
Board of Education addressed Hendrick Hudson Central School District v. Rowley (1982)
d.
e.
f.
Placement in the general education classroom with the support of aids and
services must be offered to a student prior to considering more restrictive
placements. Placement outside the regular education classroom in order to meet
the students needs must be justified.
Cedar Rapids Community School District v. Garret F. (1999)
i.
i.
i.
i.
Expanded and clarified the concept for related services to include intensive and
continuous health care services necessary for students to attend school that are
not provided by a physician.
Key Special Education Legislation
i.
II.
a.
ii.
III.
a.
b.
i.
ii.
iii.
IV.
a.
b.
This act employs a broader definition of eligibility than IDEA and states that no
individual can be excluded, solely because of their disability, from participating in
any program or activity receiving federal funding, including schools.
ii. Schools may be required to develop plans to meet the needs of students who
require accommodations.
iii.
Section 504 covers the entire lifespan not just the school years.
PL 101-336 (1990): Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)
i.
i.
ii.
iii.
c.
V.
Interindividual differences are differences between students (examples: height, sports skill,
reading ability)
b.
Intraindividual differences are differences within a student (examples: individual strengths
and weaknesses)
c. Both are important considerations for the IEP team and classroom teacher
Referral and Assessment for Special Education
a.
VI.
a.
Prereferral
i.
b.
Referral
c.
The child is referred for assessment because prereferral interventions were not
successful. A referral can be made by a classroom teacher, parent, or other
concerned party and must include information regarding the students progress
and the supports and interventions that have been implemented. A committee
reviews the information and obtains parental permission for further assessment if
the documents warrant such action.
Assessment
i.
i.
Parents must provide permission for schools to conduct formal evaluations of their
child. Assessments must be conducted in the childs native language and the child
must be assessed in all areas of a suspected disability. Assessment tools may
include formal and informal measures such as standardized tests, interviews,
observations and work samples. The goal is to develop a complete picture of the
childs strengths and needs using a multidisciplinary team approach. If a disability
is present, a child may be eligible for an IEP if the disability impacts their
educational performance. If the disability does not impact the childs educational
performance, the child may still be eligible for accommodations under Section 504.
1.
a. Norm-referenced assessments
b.
Criterion-referenced assessments
d.
e.
VII.
a.
b.
i.
ii.
iii.
A parent/guardian
The student, when appropriate
The childs teachers including a general education teacher and a special educator
c.
VIII.
b.
Regular Class: Students who receive the majority of their education in a regular
classroom and receive special education and related services outside the regular
classroom for less than 21% of the school day. This placement option also
includes individuals who are provided with specialized instruction or services
within the regular classroom setting.
ii. Resource Room: Students who receive special education and related services
outside the regular classroom for at least 21% but less than 60% of the school
day. Students are pulled out of the regular classroom and receive specialized
instruction or services in a separate classroom for limited periods of time. Services
may be individualized or offered in small groups. A common placement option for
children with less severe disabilities.
iii.
Separate Class: Students who receive special education and related services
outside the regular class for more than 60% of the school day. Commonly known
as a self-contained classroom wherein pupils, usually those with more severe
disabilities, receive full-time instruction or, in a modified version, participate in
nonacademic aspects of school activities. Classroom is located in regular school
building.
iv.
Separate School: Students who receive special education and related services in
a public or private separate day school for students with disabilities, at public
expense, for more than 50% of the school day.
v.
Residential Facility: Students who receive a special education in a public or private
residential facility, at public expense, 24 hours a day.
vi. Homebound/Hospital: Students placed in and receiving a special education in a
hospital or homebound program.
Important Placement Considerations
i.
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
The Least Restrictive (LRE) option is the general education classroom because it
provides the most access to children without disabilities.
Increased emphasis on providing supports and services within the general
education classroom.
Students may need a more restrictive setting to meet their unique needs.
LRE: Not a place but a concept
There isnt a one size fits all approach to special education that assumes
that all students can have their needs met in the same location. Different
students have different needs that may make some placement options
more appropriate for some students than they are for other students with
the same disability.
Regular Education Initiative (REI): Focus on collaboration between regular and
special educators to develop effective practices for all students
1.
A shared responsibility between special and general education educators
increases collaboration and results in a greater ability to meet the needs
of all students with and without disabilities in the classroom.
Full Inclusion
1.
Full inclusion is the belief that all children with disabilities should be taught
exclusively, with the appropriate supports, in the general education
classroom. The LRE may not be the regular education classroom for
some students although it should be the first consideration for placement
when considering the continuum of service delivery options. IEPs require
educators to justify educational placements outside of the general
education classroom.
2.
CEC policy statement on full inclusion
1.
v.
vi.
Key Terms
Assessment: The process of gathering information and identifying a students strengths and needs
through a variety of instruments and products; data used in making decisions
Child-find: A function of each state, mandated by federal law, to locate and refer individuals who
might require special education
Criterion-referenced assessments: An assessment procedure in which a students performance is
compared to a particular level of mastery/full inclusion An interpretation of the principle of least
restrictive environment advocating that all pupils with disabilities are to be educated in the general
education classroom
Inter-individual differences: Differences between two or more persons in a particular area
Intra-individual differences: Differences within the individual; unique patterns of strengths and
weaknesses
Least Restrictive Environment (LRE): A relative concept individually determined for each student;
principle that each pupil should be educated, to the maximum extent appropriate, with classmates
who are typical.
Mainstreaming: An early term for the practice of integrating students with special needs into a
general education classroom for all or part of the school day
Multi-disciplinary team: A group of professionals from different disciplines who function as a team
but perform their roles independent of one another
Norm-referenced Assessments: Refers to standardized tests on which a pupils performance is
compared to that of his or her peers.
Quiz
1. PL 94-142 was the first public law mandating a free, appropriate public education.
true
2. The language contained in IDEA 2004 clearly defined who may be considered a highly qualified
special educator.
true
3. The philosophy of Zero Reject believes that all children, regardless of their disability, should be
provided an appropriate education.
true
4. PL 101-476 identified Autism and Traumatic Brain Injury as separate disability categories.
true
5. IDEA 2004 imposed a statute of limitations on parents for filing a due process complaint from the
time they knew or should have known that a violation occurred.
true
6. Reevaluation of eligibility for special education must occur annually.
false
7. PL 108-446 requires that all students participate in all state- and district-wide assessments.
true
8. Inter-individual differences are frequently the reason why students are placed into special
education programs.
true
9. Pre-referral interventions are mandated by IDEA.
false
10. Placement in the least restrictive and the most normalized setting is based on a completed IEP.
true
11. In _________________________the Supreme Court ruled that separate schools for black and
white students were inherently unequal, contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment, and thus
unconstitutional.
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka Kansas
12. The U.S. Supreme Court ruling ________________________was interpreted to mean that special
educators can now provide services to children in parochial schools.
Agostini v. Felton
13. The need for testing linguistically different students in their primary language as well as English
was argued in:
Diana v. State Board of Education
14. The Education of all Handicapped Children Act (PL 94-142) was passed in:
1975
15. Which of the following is NOT a requirement for special education teachers under the No Child
Left Behind Act (PL 107-110 NCLB) of 2001?
Teachers may teach five years in a public school and become certified
16. ____________requires schools to educate all children, to the maximum extent appropriate, with
their nondisabled peers.
Least restrictive environment
17. This was the first public law specifically aimed at protecting children and adults against
discrimination due to a disability:
Section 504 of 1973 Rehabilitation Act
18. A(n) _________________________is a management tool that stipulates who will be involved in
providing special education, what services and instruction will be provided, where they will be
delivered, and for how long.
IEP
19. Elements of a meaningful IEP include:
Current performance
Related services
Meaningful goals
20. Beginning at age 16, the IEP must include a statement of needed______________
transition services
21. Measurable annual goals must include all but which of the following components:
objectives and annual benchmarks for all students
22. The _______________ is designed for the delivery of services to infants and children until their
third birthday.
IFSP
23. It is generally agreed that the most normalized setting for individuals with disabilities is in
the_______________.
general education classroom
24. This term, while popular, is not mentioned in the federal regulations.
mainstreaming
25. Elements of a Full Inclusion model include:
Zero rejection
Site-based management and coordination
Home-school attendance
Additional Exercises
PowerPoint Slides
Underrepresentation: fewer students in a particular category than one might expect based
on their numbers in the school population
There is typically an underrepresentation of minority students in gifted and talented
programs.
OVER-identification
o Primarily soft disabilities:
MMR, ED, SLD.
o English language learners
Speech and language, LD.
o Usually NOT in medically diagnosed categories:
Deafness
Blindness
Downs syndrome, etc.
Challenges
o Accurately interpret behaviors of learner
How culturally competent are you?
Is there a universality of childrens behavior?
o What is multicultural curiosity?
Deconstruct cultural narratives
o What are the main minority groups in the USA?
Depends
Altering Pedagogy
o Context-embedding
Use the students experiences as tools
o Providing meaningful experiences
Multiple perspectives
o Equitable representation of groups
o Interactive and experiential teaching
Assessment Innovations
o Nondiscriminatory assessments
o Test revisions
o Multiple Intelligences
o Portfolio assessments
Educational Suggestions
o Display sensitivity to the cultural heritage of all students
o Use instructional strategies and materials that respect different learning styles and
personal experiences
o Consider the instructional environment and the impact on student behavior
Learning Objectives:
Explain how cultural and linguistic diversity is affecting U.S. classrooms.
Define culture, multiculturalism, multicultural education, and bilingual education.
List six instructional options for teaching students who are bilingual.
Outline the issues associated with the disproportional representation of culturally and linguistically
diverse learners in special education.
Describe the challenges confronting educators when assessing students from culturally and
linguistically diverse groups.
Lecture Outline:
I.
Cultural Diversity: The Changing Face of a Nation
a.
Culture
b.
The attitudes, values, belief systems, norms, and traditions shared by a particular
group of people that can be reflected in their language, religion, dress, diet, and
social customs.
Multiculturalism
c.
i.
i.
i.
Education that is infused throughout the curriculum and values the customs, race,
language, and ideas of all cultures including cultural constructs such as race,
gender, and disability.
d.
Bilingual education
e.
An educational strategy for students whose first language is not English where
they receive instruction in their native language while learning English.
Macroculture
f.
g.
Distinct subcultures within the larger culture that retain their own unique
characteristics.
English Learners
h.
Individuals whose primary or home language is not English and who are not yet
proficient in English so they cannot fully profit from instruction provided in English.
The Federal Government only recognizes seven distinct racial groups:
i.
i.
i.
i.
II.
a.
b.
c.
III.
a.
Numerous attempts have been made to limit bias in assessment tools and procedures.
Test revisions
1.
Tests were renormed, or restandardized, to reflect the diversity of todays
American schools. An example includes the Kaufman Assessment Battery
for Children (K-ABC) II which was redesigned in 2004.
ii. Multiple Intelligences
1.
Howard Gardner (1983, 1993) suggested a broader view of intelligence
that looks at characteristics that are not traditionally assessed on standard
IQ tests. Gardner proposed eight different, though related intelligences:
verbal/linguistic, musical/rhythmic, bodily/kinesthetic, interpersonal,
logical/mathematical, visual/spatial, intrapersonal, and naturalist.
iii.
Portfolio assessments
1.
Portfolio assessments are considered authentic, performance-based
assessment strategies that demonstrate an individuals growth over time
rather than comparing the progress to a set of norms.
Classroom Suggestions for Teachers of Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students with
Disabilities
i.
IV.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
Assess a child in both English and in the native language before administering other tests
so that a childs abilities in the native language can be determined. A student may have an
English language barrier but understand the content in the native language.
A student must exhibit a disability when evaluated in the native language or the student
does not have a disability.
Schools should use multiple assessment tools and procedures including a combination of
formal and informal measures that are collected from the child, teacher(s), and the
parents.
Evaluators should use tools and techniques that are as unbiased as possible to obtain
accurate results.
An interpreter may be used if bilingual education is not available and the interpreter has
experience in assessment terminology and principles.
Parents should be involved in developing assessments that will yield meaningful results.
g.
h.
i.
j.
Display sensitivity to the cultural heritage of all students through the use of appropriate
materials and instructional practices and through critical consideration of the curriculum.
Teachers attitudes impact the perceptions and beliefs of students.
Use instructional strategies and materials that respect different learning styles in order to
meet the needs of all students in the classroom and help them to achieve academic
success.
Consider the instructional environment and the impact on student behavior. Students come
to school with a variety of experiences that influence how they respond to school
situations. Varying cultural expectations may influence students behavior within the
classroom.
The instructional materials that teachers use in the classroom communicate cultural values
to students through the pictures, examples, language, and attitudes they experience within
them. Critical consideration and selection of instructional materials can help to promote
positive attitudes regarding diversity among students. It is also valuable for all students to
learn to critically evaluate diversity issues within the curriculum and within their own lives
Key terms
Bilingual education: An educational approach whereby students whose first language is not English
are instructed primarily through their native language while developing competency and proficiency
in English.
Bilingual special education: Strategy whereby a pupils home language and culture are used along
with English in an individually designed program of special instruction
Cultural pluralism: The practice of appreciating and respecting ethnic and cultural differences.
Culture: The attitudes, values, belief systems, norms, and traditions shared by a particular group of
people that collectively form their heritage
English Learners (ELs): Students whose primary language is not English and who have yet to
achieve proficiency in English
Ethnocentrism: A perspective whereby a person views his or her cultural practices as correct and
those of other groups as inferior, peculiar, or deviant
Field dependent / sensitive: Students who approach learning intuitively rather than analytically and
logically. These students tend to find success in cooperative learning situations and group work
Field independent: Learners who are detail oriented and analytically inclined. These students tend
to thrive in competitive settings
Macro-culture: The shared or national culture of a society
Melting pot: A metaphor describing the United States in the early decades of the twentieth century.
Micro-cultures: Distinct subcultures within a larger culture; these groups maintain their own distinct
values, norms, folkways, and identification
Multi-culturism: Referring to more than one culture; acknowledges basic commonalities among
groups of people while appreciating their differences
Multiple intelligences: An alternative perspective on intelligence suggesting that there are many
different kinds of intelligence
Multicultural education: An ambiguous concept that deals with issues of race, language, social
class, and culture as well as disability and gender. Also viewed as an educational strategy wherein
the cultural heritage of each pupil is valued
Nondiscriminatory testing: Federal mandate that assessments be conducted in a culturally
responsive fashion
Overrepresentation: A situation in which a greater number of students from minority groups are
placed in special education programs than would be expected based on the proportion of pupils in
the general school population.
Portfolio assessment: A type of authentic assessment; samples of different work products gathered
over time and across curriculum areas are evaluated.
Underrepresentation: A situation in which fewer children from minority groups are placed in special
education programs than would be expected based on the proportion of pupils in the general
school population
Quiz
1. About one in five residents, or approximately 20 percent of the U.S. population over the age of 5,
speak a language other than English at home.
true
2. Despite increasing cultural and linguistic diversity in our schools, almost 90 percent of general and
special education teachers are white.
true
3. Cultural pluralism requires cultural groups to relinquish or abandon their cultural heritage.
false
4. Individuals who are English Learners (ELs) represent a very homogeneous group of individuals.
false
5. Culturally bound test items are an example of intrinsic bias factors.
true
6. IDEA states that learning disabilities must exclude individuals whose learning problem is the result
of a language or cultural difference.
true
7. By the year 2020, students of color are projected to make up 75% of all school-aged youth in the
United States.
false
8. The melting pot theorys goal was to remove all individual cultures and merge them into one.
true
9. Textbook curriculums should have contributions from diverse cultural and linguistic groups
true
10. Multicultural education and bilingual education are synonymous terms.
false
11. Components of Bacas definition of bilingual special education include:
The use of the home language
The culture of the home
Additional Exercises
o SEE THE IPF ON PAGE 721. Here the teacher and consultant can sit and discuss the
specific strategies to address the writing deficit. As a school psychologist you have a
means to ensure that the teacher is doing what she/he is supposed to be doing.
o While problems solving with the teacher, be aware of three traditional classroom problems:
o Allocation of insufficient opportunities to practice over-reliance on published writing
curriculum. These canned approaches focus on conventions, and students dont show
much growth by just looking at grammar or punctuation.
o No attention is given to the critical thinking skills, everything that the students score is
based on is outcome product. Must look at how the story is connected, arranged and
thought out, not just the finished product.
o Since there is limited data on what makes a good writing from a poor writer, the literature
suggests looking at a convergence of information among multiple measures of student
performance.
Mathematics Difficulties
Computational skills
Word problems
Spatial relationships
Writing numbers
Copying shapes, patterns
Understanding mathematical concepts
Dyscalculia
Mathematics: applied solutions
64% of fourth graders were performing at a basic skill level (e.g., partial mastery)
21% of fourth graders were rated as performing at a proficient level (e.g., demonstrated mastery)
The percentage of eighth graders who can add, subtract, multiply, divide and solve one-step word
problems (i.e., 2nd grade skills) was 79%.
Social and Emotional Difficulties
Lower self-esteem
Poor self-concept
Frustration
Difficulty understanding and interpreting social cues and social situations
Difficulty making and maintaining friendships and relationships
Assessment of Students with Learning Disabilities
Assessment Decisions
Assessments are conducted to determine if a discrepancy exists between the childs potential and
achievement.
o Includes a variety of intellectual, achievement, and other assessments to determine the
childs potential and actual achievement.
o Discrepancies formulas and eligibility vary by state.
Response to Intervention (RTI)
States have the option to use a discrepancy model to determine eligibility or they may implement
RTI strategies.
RTI is generally a process that increases the levels of instructional interventions provided in the
regular classroom. Students who do not meet with success with intensive interventions may have
a learning disability.
Provides instructional support without waiting for a special education label.
Assessment Strategies
Norm-referenced assessment
Criterion-referenced assessment
Curriculum-based assessment
Portfolio assessment
Common Characteristics of Preschoolers Who Are At-Risk for Later Classification of a Learning Disability
Poor depth perception
Toe walking
Distractibility
Impulsiveness
Hyperactivity
Poor motor control
Delayed speech
Limited vocabulary
Memory problems
Immaturity (?)
Learning
Objectives:
Summarize the key components of the IDEA definition of learning disabilities.
Outline the four phases in the development of the field of learning disabilities.
Identify possible causes of learning disabilities.
List representative learning and social/emotional characteristics of individuals with learning
disabilities.
Lecture Outline:
I.
Defining Learning Disabilities
a.
b.
The term learning disability represents a fairly new concept- a disability that is not
physically apparent and cannot be seen.
In 1977, to comply with the Education for All Handicapped Children Act, a specific learning
disability was determined to mean a disorder that manifest itself in childrens inability to
perform certain tasks in specified ways. This disability excludes children who have other
disabilities that contribute to their learning delays. This definition remained largely
unchanged in later legislation. Current federal criteria for diagnosing a learning disability
includes:
Student does not achieve at expected age and ability levels when compared to
age-level norms on standardized assessment measures
Current IDEA definition
i.
c.
II.
a.
b.
c.
d.
III.
IV.
V.
a.
VI.
b.
c.
VII.
a.
b.
Controversy about what the LRE is for students with learning disabilities even though
many are placed in inclusive classrooms.
Individualized instruction is most effective but three approaches are commonly used
Cognitive training: Help students learn new ways to complete tasks and think
about their learning
ii. Direct instruction: Teacher-directed lessons that provide step-by-step explicit
instruction
iii.
Mnemonic strategies: Aids with recall by creating an association that is easily
remembered
iv.
Learning strategies: Teach students how to find and learn new information
Services for Young Children with Learning Disabilities
i.
VIII.
a.
b.
c.
d.
IX.
Controversial to test for learning disabilities at this age due to variations in growth and
development
Label developmentally delay is often used for young children instead of learning disability.
Curriculum models:
i. Developmental/cognitive model
ii. Behavioral curriculum model
iii.
Functional curriculum
Transition into Adulthood
a.
Transition planning must occur via the IEP and must consider:
X.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
Family Issues
XI.
Families with a child with a learning disability may experience a wide range of concerns
and often rely on a support network made up of friends and family members in addition to
parent organizations and professional groups. Many organizations offer support for families
of children with disabilities.
Issues of Diversity
a.
XII.
XIII.
Vocabulary
Heritability studies: A method for assessing the degree to which a specific condition is inherited; a
comparison of the prevalence of a characteristic in fraternal versus identical twins.
learned helplessness: A lack of persistence at tasks that can be mastered; a tendency to expect
failure
Learning disabilities: A disability in which there is a discrepancy between a persons ability and
academic achievement; individual possesses average intelligence.
learning strategies: instructional methodologies focusing on teaching students how to learn;
designed to assist pupils in becoming more actively engaged and involved in their own learning
Metacognition: The ability to evaluate and monitor ones own performance.
Mnemonic strategies: A cognitive approach used to assist pupils in remembering material; the use
of rhymes, pictures, acronyms, and similar aids to help in recall.
Norm-referenced assessments: Refers to standardized tests on which a pupils performance is
compared to that of his or her peers.
outer-directedness: A condition characterized by a loss of confidence in ones own capabilities and
a reliance on others for cues and guidance
Phonological awareness: Possible explanation for the reading problems of some students with
learning disabilities; difficulty in recognizing the correspondence between specific sounds and
certain letters that make up words.
Phonemes: Smallest unit of sound found in spoken language.
Phonemic awareness: The ability to recognize that words consist of different sounds or phonemes.
Portfolio assessment: A type of authentic assessment; samples of different work products gathered
over time and across curriculum areas are evaluated.
Pragmatics: A sociolinguistic system involving the use of communication skills in social contexts.
progress monitoring: The frequent and systematic assessment of a pupils academic progress
Response to intervention (RTI): A strategy used for determining whether a pupil has a learning
disability. Student is exposed to increasing levels of validated instructional intervention;
responsiveness to the instruction is assessed; a lack of adequate progress typically leads to a
referral for possible special education services.
self-instruction: A cognitive strategy for changing behavior; pupils initially talk to themselves out
loud while performing a task and verbally reward themselves for success.
Short term memory: The recall of information after a brief period of time.
Summary of performance: required by federal regulation for each student who exits secondary
school, a summary of the individuals academic achievement and functional performance with
recommendations for supports and services aimed at assisting the adolescent in achieving his or
her transition goals.
Working memory: The ability to retain information while also engaging in another cognitive activity.
Quiz
1. Individuals with learning disabilities are a very heterogeneous group. True
2. Individuals with learning disabilities have normal intelligence. True
3. The definition of learning disabilities and its accompanying regulations describe a student rather than a
particular syndrome. False
4. Fernald developed the multisensory approach to instruction. True
5. Response to Intervention (RTI) gives educators another way of discovering whether a child has a
learning disability. True
6. The medical literature uses the term acquired trauma when describing injury or damage of the central
nervous system which may result in a learning disability. True
7. The concept of learning disabilities covers an extremely narrow range of characteristics. False
8. Boys are four times as likely as girls to be identified as learning disabled. True
9. Currently, there is a nationally agreed upon mechanism for determining a discrepancy. False
10. Although support for RTI is growing in some educational circles, the research evidence is limited and
some professionals still adhere to the traditional discrepancy model. True
11. To be identified as an individual with a learning disability, an eligibility team determines that a child has a
severe discrepancy between achievement and intellectual ability
12. Which of the following is not considered an exclusionary item under the definition of learning
disabilities? Number of siblings in the home
13. The term learning disability was coined by: Sam Kirk
14. An alternative referral procedure that determines if the pupil responds to empirically validated,
scientifically-based interventions is known as: response to intervention
15. Which of the following is not one of the possible causes of LD? Poverty
16. Some children are incorrectly identified as learning disabled when in fact their learning deficits are the
result of: poor teaching
17. Behavioral characteristics of individuals with learning disabilities generally include all but which of the
following? Sub average intelligence
18. Dyslexia refers to: reading problems
19. Metacognition is defined as: the ability to evaluate and monitor ones own performance
20. Learned helplessness is best described as: easily gives up or not attempting a task
21. Utilizing the phrase Never Eat Soggy Waffles to remember the points on a compass is an example of:
Mnemonic devices
22. Direct instruction focuses on a concept to be learned.
23. This technique focuses on teaching students how to learn: learning strategies
24. One suggestion for teaching students with learning disabilities would include: using short sentences
and clear vocabulary
25. A major disagreement among special educators is: the actual existence of a learning disability
Additional exercises
List representative learning and social/emotional characteristics of individuals with learning
disabilities.
Emotional Disabilities
Condition exhibiting one or more of the following characteristics over a long period of time and to a
marked degree, that adversely affects a students educational performance:
o An inability to learn
o An inability to build or maintain interpersonal relationships with peers and adults
o Inappropriate types of behavior/feelings under normal circumstances
o Pervasive mood of unhappiness or depression
o A tendency to develop physical fears or symptoms or fears associated with personal or
school problems
o Includes children who are schizophrenic
Includes Socially Maladjusted if the student is also determined to be emotionally disturbed
Behavioral or emotional responses so different from appropriate age, cultural, or ethnic norms that
they adversely affect educational performance
o Unresponsive to direct intervention
Common Characteristics
Two primary behavioral excesses
o Externalizing behaviors (most common behavior pattern)
Noncompliance
Temper tantrums
Property destruction
Threats of violence or violence toward peers and/or teachers
o Internalizing behaviors
Overly shy or immature
Withdrawn
Easily upset and difficult to calm
Behavioral deficits
o Academic achievement
Low GPA
High absenteeism
At risk for school failure and early drop out
o Social skills
Less participation in extracurricular activities
Lower quality peer relationships
Juvenile delinquency
Expressed less desire to relate to other the student
Fewer social skills
Concomitant with ADHD and CD, depression
More likely to be arrested while in school
Approximately 75% of students with ED also have clinically significant language
deficits.
In Summary
To qualify:
o Must present one of the following five classes of behaviors and for the duration and
intensity stipulated AND the behavior must impact their education.
o Students, who do not qualify under IDEA 2004, may still qualify under Section 504.
Social or Scientific Construction?
Are the decisions influenced by
o our personal beliefs
o our standards and values
o our impressions of what is or is not normal behavior
o the context in which the behavior occurs
Criticisms of the ED definition
Implied empirical basis for the five ED criteria
Interpretation that educational performance includes academics but excludes social and
behavioral performance
Exclusion of socially maladjusted children
Possible Purpose of the SM clause
Exclude children who are juvenile delinquents
SM closer to CD not ED
Milder form of problematic behavior
SM behaviors are generally volitional and may be manipulated via contingency management
SM students usually can learn
SM behaviors are typically able to be manipulated by contingency management
SM behaviors are learned
More on Socially Maladjusted
A socially maladjusted student behaves in socially unacceptable ways for socially unacceptable
motives.
To distinguish between SM and ED: Is the student unable or unwilling?
Focus of ED assessment
Viewed as child psychopathology, or as within-child variables
Viewed as behavioral-environmental interactions.
o Emphasis is placed on the interplay of child / parent or teacher interactions. Coercive
patterns are illustrated and addressed.
Viewed as resistant to interventions
o The environment in which the child is placed as disordered and consequently
handicapping the child.
Multidimensional Assessment
Drawn from at least three sources:
o Parents, teachers and student
Using a variety of tools: rating forms, standardized testing, cba, interviews, observations
o Must consider RTI
o Across a variety of settings
o Under a variety of conditions (preference v. non-preference activities).
Identification and Assessment
Screening tests
o Used to determine if intervention is warranted
Projective tests
o Limited usefulness for education planning
Direct observation and measurement
o Directly focuses on the childs problems
o Useful for educational planning
Functional Behavioral Assessment
Systematic, data-driven process
o Informal assessment
School records, parent interviews, teacher checklists
o Direct observation and measurement
o Hypothesis development
Data used to develop intervention based on probable cause of the behavior
o Intervention
Teaching functional replacement behaviors
o Evaluation and modification
Curriculum Goals
Social skills
o Cooperation skills
o Appropriate ways to express feelings
o Responding to failure
Academic skills
o Direct, explicit instruction
o High rates of teacher praise
Behavior management
o Clear school-wide expectations
o Positive proactive classroom management strategies
Self-management
o Self-monitoring
o Self-evaluation
Peer mediation and support
o Peer tutoring
o Positive peer reporting
Behavioral Development
Externalizing Behaviors
o Yell, talk out of turn
o Disturbing peers
o Fighting
o Ignoring teacher
o Destroy property
o Lie
o Retreat to daydreams/fantasies
o Complain about being sick/hurt
o Go into deep bouts of depression
Social/Emotional Development
Externalizing
o Express feelings in the form of anger
o Rage
o Lack of empathy
o Low quality relationships
Internalizing
o Feelings are turned in on the self, creating feelings of sadness
o Excessive worry & anxiety
o Worthlessness
o Feelings of helplessness and hopelessness
o Thoughts of suicide
Academic Development
Externalizing
o Attention Seeking
o Disruptive
Internalizing
o Daydreaming, inability to finish tasks
o Average or sub-par performance on tasks
o Often overlooked by instructor
Effective Interventions
School based programs
o Children have access to services for 9 months/year
Summer based programs
o Children are not in school, may not have access to resources
o May prevent falling behind/maintain skills
Sports components (Hupp & Reitman, 1999)
o Context for practice and observation
o Incorporates other activities
Social skills training
o Use manualized curriculums to teach children about social skills
Attachment
Dearth of research in this area
o However, the available research does suggest that secure attachments are related to
adaptive social functioning as measured in middle childhood
Issues with adequate measurement of construct during middle childhood
Insecure attachment to caregivers is related to the development of psychopathology
o Insecure attachment is considered a risk factor
Methods and Procedure
Participants
o 19 students at St. Thomas Aquinas School
o Volunteer
Measures
o BASC-2
o Attachment Security Scale
o Direct Behavioral Observations (DBO)
Procedure
o 4-week program
o Strong Start/Strong Kids
o Observed during sports activities
o Parent and child report of behavior and attachment status
Analyses
Pro-Social Behaviors
Participants
o Age of Students
Range: 5 years, 1 month to 11 years, 2 months
o Grades Served (frequency):
o K (5) 1st (10) 2nd (2) 3rd (8) 4th (6) 5th (1)
o All from General Education Setting
Reading Level
o Pre-K Grade 5
o 60% of students read at Pre-K or Kindergarten level
Purpose
To evaluate the effectiveness of the Strong Start Program (SSP) with a preschool population
Hypotheses:
o Children in the SSP group will evidence greater social skills compared to a control group
o Children in the Literature group (non-SSP) will evidence greater social skills compared to a
control group
o Across dimensions, SSP will be more effective than literature in enhancing social skills in
preschoolers
Method
Participants
o Eighteen preschoolers (aged 3-5) participated in the study.
o All students were considered typically functioning.
o The students were randomly assigned into the treatment groups.
Procedure
One 30 min session/week for 8 weeks
Literature Procedure:
o Read and discuss book about specific emotion
o Art activity
Strong Start Procedure:
o Literature procedure
o Plus specific skill instruction, modeling, and practice of skill
Control Procedure:
o No intervention
o Assessments conducted at week 1, 4 and 8.
After each session, students were assessed individually on the targeted skills including:
o Emotion Identification
o Anger Management
o Worry Management
Correct & incorrect responses were recorded and percentage of correct responses was calculated.
Discussion
SSP was effective in enhancing all three skills assessed
Reading childrens literature was effective in teaching children how to identify emotions but not for
teaching anger and worry management skills
This finding is clinically relevant:
o Most preschool programs use books to teach children socially appropriate behaviors
o Data from this study suggest that a more formal method may be necessary.
Learning Objectives:
Outline the issues surrounding our understanding of emotional or behavioral disorders.
Define socially maladjusted and conduct disorders.
Distinguish between clinically derived and statistically derived systems for classifying emotional or
behavioral disorders.
Explain how society has historically dealt with persons with emotional or behavioral disorders.
Identify biological and psychosocial risk factors of emotional or behavioral disorders.
List the learning and social characteristics typical of students who exhibit emotional or behavioral
disorders.
Describe contemporary approaches for assessing pupils with emotional or behavioral disorders.
Provide examples of academic and behavioral interventions often used with individuals with
emotional or behavioral disorders.
Define time management, transition management, proximity and movement management, and
classroom arrangement.
Summarize educational services for persons with emotional or behavioral disorders across the life
span.
Lecture Outline:
I.
Defining Emotional or Behavioral Disorders
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i. Frequency
ii. Intensity
iii.
Duration
iv.
Age-appropriateness
Disturbed and disturbing behaviors based on context
Typical and atypical behavior
Variability in cultural and social expectations for behavior.
Classification systems
DSM-V
Externalizing behaviors
Internalizing behaviors
Quay and Petersons Dimensions of Problem Behaviors
1.
Conduct Disorder
2.
Socialized Aggression
3.
Attention Problems/Immaturity
4.
Anxiety/Withdrawal
5.
Psychotic Behavior
6.
Motor Tension Excess
Brief History of the Field
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
II.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
Behavioral
Psychodynamic
Psychoeducational
Ecological
Humanistic
Biogenic
III.
IV.
a.
b.
V.
a.
Research on resiliency
b.
Resilient children do not develop emotional or behavioral disorders even under the
most adverse circumstances. They display four characteristics: they are socially
competent, have excellent problem-solving skills, are autonomous, and develop
clear goals and have high aspirations.
Research on positive behavioral support
i.
VI.
a.
Learning characteristics
b.
c.
i.
i.
Deficits in the areas of pragmatics, receptive, and expressive language and limited
or inappropriate language use
Classroom Strategies
i.
VII.
VIII.
a.
b.
c.
i. Time management
ii. Transition management
iii.
Proximity and movement management
iv.
Classroom arrangement
v.
Classroom ambience
Academic and Instructional Interventions
d.
i. Academic curriculum
ii. Instructional delivery
iii.
Mnemonic strategies
iv.
Self-monitoring strategies
v.
Curriculum-based measurement
vi. Content enhancements
Behavioral and Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions
IX.
a.
b.
c.
Emotional or behavioral disorders are a predictor for school failure, delinquency, adult
psychiatric problems, and substance abuse
Absence of research on transition planning for adolescents with emotional or behavioral
disorders
Interventions, such as wrap-around programs, should be started early and may need to be
maintained throughout life
X.
d.
Support to graduate from high school and pursue higher education
Adults with Emotional or Behavioral Disorders
XI.
Adults with emotional or behavioral disorders are no longer protected by IDEA; they are
protected by Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act and the Americans with Disabilities Act
(ADA) that ensures reasonable accommodations in postsecondary education and in the
workplace.
b.
Adults with emotional or behavioral disorders may need supports and services to
successfully complete postsecondary training programs and obtain competitive
employment.
Family-Centered Interventions
XII.
XIII.
XIV.
a.
a.
a.
a.
b.
Vocabulary
Behavioral intervention plan: A characteristic common in persons with ADHD; impacts executive
functions. Typically affects the ability to (1) withhold a planned response; (2) interrupt an ongoing
response; and (3) protect an ongoing response from distractions
Child maltreatment: The neglect and/or physical, emotional, or sexual abuse of a child.
Classroom arrangement: The physical layout of the classroom and its dcor; a proactive
intervention technique designed to minimize disruptions while increasing pupil engagement.
Clinically derived classification systems: A system frequently used by mental health professionals
to describe childhood, adolescent, and adult mental disorders
Conduct disorders: A common psychiatric disorder among children and youth characterized by
disruptive and aggressive behavior as well as other actions that violate societal rules.
Conflict resolutions: Program designed to teach problem-solving skills along with strategies for
negotiation and mediation.
Content enhancements: Instructional aids designed to assist pupils in understanding major
concepts, ideas, and vocabulary in a way that aids the acquisition, organization, and recall of
material.
Crisis prevention and management programs: Techniques taught to teachers on how to effectively
and proactively deal with students violent, aggressive, and/or self-injurious behaviors; a proactive
preventative approach.
Emotional or behavioral disorders: A chronic condition characterized by behaviors that significantly
differ from age norms and community standards to such a degree that educational performance is
adversely affected.
Emotional disturbance: A term often used when referring to individuals with emotional or behavioral
disorders.
Externalizing disorders: A behavior disorder characterized by aggressive, disruptive, acting-out
behavior.
Family centered early intervention: A philosophy of working with families that stresses family
strengths and capabilities, the enhancement of skills, and the development of mutual partnerships
between service providers and families.
Functional behavioral assessment: A behavioral strategy that seeks to determine the purpose or
function that a particular behavior serveswhat is occasioning and maintaining the behavior.
Internalizing disorders: Behavior disorders characterized by anxiety, withdrawal, fearfulness, and
other conditions reflecting an individuals internal state.
Interpersonal problem solving: Teaching pupils the cognitive skills needed to avoid and resolve
interpersonal conflicts, peer pressure, and ways of coping with stress and their own feelings.
Mentally ill: A generic term often used by professionals outside of the field of special education to
refer to individuals with emotional or behavioral disorders.
Mnemonic strategies: A cognitive approach used to assist pupils in remembering material; the use
of rhymes, pictures, acronyms, and similar aids to help in recall.
Person centered planning: Useful when developing a students individualized education program;
creates a vision for pupils future based on an analysis of his or her strengths, needs, and
preferences.
Physical restraint: The restriction of a students freedom of movement, physical activity, or access
to his or her body.
Positive behavioral support: An alternative approach to punishment; a schoolwide, proactive way of
addressing problematic behaviors.
Primary prevention: Activities aimed at eliminating a problem or condition prior to its onset; may
also refer to reducing the number of new instances of problematic behavior.
Proximity and movement management: A classroom management strategy focusing on the
effective use of classroom space and the arrangement of the physical environment as a means of
minimizing disruptive behavior.
Response to intervention (RTI): A strategy used for determining whether a pupil has a learning
disability. Student is exposed to increasing levels of validated instructional intervention;
Quiz
1. The definition of emotional or behavioral disorders is universally accepted. False
2. The definition of emotional disturbance includes schizophrenia. True
3. The current IDEA definition of emotional disturbance is controversial. True
4. Social maladjustment behaviors are often equated with conduct disorders. True
5. The federal definition of emotional disturbance includes individuals with conduct disorders as part of the
definition. False
6. In general, there are multiple tests available to medical professionals to diagnosis emotional or
behavioral disorders among children and youth. False
7. One major reason given for the under identification of emotional or behavioral disordered students is the
marked variability across states in identifying pupils with the disorder. True
8. A behavioral intervention plan is a rarely used assessment strategy to evaluate students with emotional
and behavior disorders. False
9. Currently, a majority of students with emotional or behavioral disorders receive a special education and
related services in environments that segregate them from their nondisabled peers for all or part of the
school day. True
10. Early antisocial behavior has been identified as an antecedent to such negative long-term outcomes as
dropout, delinquency, violence, and drug abuse in adolescence and adulthood. True
11. Which of the follow is NOT one of the dimensions of behavior common to most definitions of emotional
or behavioral disorders? The geographical region in which the behavior occurs
12. Individuals with an emotional disturbance exhibit unique characteristics that: exist over a long period of
time, are to a marked degree, and adversely affects a childs educational performance.
13. Many professionals outside the field of special education incorrectly equate emotional or behavioral
disorders with mental illness
14. the most widely used classification system for students with emotional or behavioral disorders is the:
DSM-5
15. An example of an externalizing behavioral problem is: a temper tantrum
16. An example of an internalizing behavioral problem is: withdrawal
17. Initiatives that have recently strengthened the assessment process as it relates to students with
emotional or behavioral disorders are: person-centered planning, strength-based assessment and
functional behavioral assessment.
18. A functional behavioral assessment is a required component of the assessment process for students
with disabilities who present behavioral challenges.
19. In developing a behvarial intervention plan, the IEP team must consider the use of positive behavioral
interventions, strategies, and supports to address the problematic behaviors.
20. Positive behavioral support is a school-wide approach designed to prevent problems and to intervene
early to prevent behaviors from escalating.
21. It is generally believed that corporal punishment is ineffective as a preventive strategy
22. Poverty has been shown to be a significant risk factor for the development of emotional or behavioral
disorders.
23. This strategy focuses on teaching students the thinking skills necessary to avoid and resolve
interpersonal conflicts. Interpersonal problem solving
24. Conflict resolution programs are designed to teach not only problem-solving skills but skills related to
negotiation and mediation.
25. System of care is defined as an integrated, community-based system that addresses the multiple
domains of challenges encountered by children and youth with emotional or behavioral disorders and their
families.
Additional exercises
Provide examples of academic and behavioral interventions often used with individuals with
emotional or behavioral disorders.
An Introduction to Deafness
movie and television programs. Her biggest role was in the movie Children of a Lesser God in
which she won an Oscar for her performance. Marlee is a famous actress in deaf and hearing
culture and has continued to appear in different television shows such as ER, Desperate
Housewives, the West Wing, and Law and Order.
Heather Whitestone (1973 )
Heather Whitestone was born in Dothan, Alabama and became deaf when she was 18 months old.
In 1995, she won the Miss America pageant.
Since the age of 5, she loved ballet and performed a dance in the pageant to help her win.
Definitions
Deaf: Those persons whose hearing loss makes it impossible for them to understand speech and
language with or without the use of hearing aids
Hard of hearing: Those persons whose hearing loss makes it difficult, but not impossible, for them
to understand speech and language with or without the use of hearing aids
IDEA Definition
A hearing impairment which is so severe that the student is impaired in processing linguistic
information through hearing, with or without amplification, which adversely affects educational
performance.
Categories of Deaf Community
Hearing Impaired
Hard of Hearing
Late deafened (Advantageously)
Culturally Deaf
Oral Deaf
Supports and Technologies
Interpreters
o Interpreters have increased the ability of students to perform well in school
Speech-to-text translation
o Computer devices that translate speech to text
Television captioning
o Captioning helps students comprehend more
Text telephones
o Helps teachers communicate with deaf students
Alerting devices
In the inner ear, thousands of microscopic hair cells are bent by the wavelike action of fluid inside
the cochlea.
The bending of these hairs sets off nerve impulses that are then passed through the auditory nerve
to the hearing center of the brain. This center translates the impulses into sounds the brain can
recognize.
One belief
Deafness isolates a student from the world of the majority language as well as from the world of
sound
o To the hearing student, the world is his classroom
o To a deaf student, education stops when he steps out of the classroom
Problems with Low Incidence
Deafness occurs in low incidence (1.5%)
o Students can be isolated in rural areas
o Families are isolated and far from services and education
o Adequately trained providers are rare, hard to find, costly for only 1-2 students in a school
o Intensive training programs for teachers of the deaf and educational interpreters are few in
the nation
Impact of Low Incidence
Young children are far from needed therapy and learning environments that provide rich language
development
o Preschool providers dont know sign language
o Parents dont know sign language
o Neither understand the principles of building language skills
o Learners arrive in Kindergarten with language skills at the age 2-3 year level
o School age children lack appropriate services despite good intentions
o Most children are in regular education settings with support services
o Sixty-seven (67%) per cent of the English sounds are INVISIBLE on the lips
o Examples:
Jane shade chain
5:15 5:50
Cochlear implants
Best success when implanted at an early age (before age 2 years)
Requires 3-5 years of intensive therapy to learn to interpret sound accurately as speech
Allows about 25% of those children implanted before age 5 years sufficient listening skills to
depend on spoken language alone
50% will need support through ASL for schooling
25% use the implant for environmental awareness only and require ASL for instruction
Students implanted later than 2 years tend to have less auditory success
Approximately 30-40% of individuals with hearing impairments have an additional disability. This is
found in the literature and in a recent survey from Gallaudet.
o Parents may not have the language skills to communicate effectively around the abstract
concepts of emotional and interpersonal issues.
o Students face challenges in building close social relationships with peers and staff
o Students cannot communicate directly with their hearing peers most must use an
interpreter
All these factors lead to ISOLATION
The age of identification of an additional disability tends to be delayed in children who are
deaf/hoh.
Range
4-8
7-12
8-15
They often require more hands-on approach to learning and repetition and rote strategies.
Some children are perceived as having memory problems as they seem to learn something and
need it re-taught.
A Tangent
Teaching pre-lingual typically developing infants sign language is a good use of their (our) time
o Improve communication and emerging literacy skills
o Determine if tantrum behavior is altered as a function of sign communication
Data suggests that infants use their first purposeful sign at 6 months. They are using purposeful
signs and we are struggling to interpret what they mean. Rather than this, apply sign language and
create a more functional experience. Synchronous linguistic development benefits the child in a
number of ways discussed shortly.
Goodwyn, Acredolo and Brown (2000) remarked that the benefits of early sign presentation include
Increases in infant-directed speech which is correlated with accelerated language development
(expressive and receptive)
Related to this is the concept of scaffolding by Vygotsky. Goodwyn and her colleagues suggested
that this was a bit like scaffolding in the sense that the sign acquired by the infant narrows the gap
between the present communicative abilities and the task. Prior the kid cried when he wanted
more. Now presents the sign. They also argue that by earlier signing the infant is more likely to
explore other ways to communicate. At a more subtle level the infant begins to expand their
general understanding of the properties of the word. The sign airplane is a hand shape that moves
but it doesnt move down by your knees, but rather up in the air and it makes a noise and it goes
fast and so on and so on.
Payoff for parents may be fewer tantrums. In the research you will find sign language or gestured
communications used in studies with children with MR, Autism, and ED. Behavioral and academic
responding has been shown to improve with the addition of signs supporting efforts.
Sign Language and Hearing Infants
Beyond Katie Couric
Early Sign Studies
o Bilingual Students
Harford, CT.
Lower SES Students
o PG County, MD
Benefits of Early Sign Exposure
Academic Benefits
Linguistic Benefits
Social Benefits
Collateral Benefits
Acredolo and Goodwyn noted that in a horse race with a group who signed at 24 months and a
group who did not sign at 24 months, the sign group posted higher scores on general language
tasks. In addition they posted higher Bayley MDI scores than the no-sign group. The benefit of
sign endures
Four years into the future at age six, the sign and no sign kids were tracked down and tested with
the WISC-III
o Sign
No Sign
o VIQ
116
103
o PIQ
109
101
o FSIQ 114
102
There is a good amount of data to suggest that signs presented prelingually will emerge prior to
spoken language (typically 3-4 months earlier).
Bring and Jones (1974) noted that the earliest signs presented go through a maturation where they
pass through phases or approximations. As the infant becomes more facile with signs, the spoken
language production is developed as a separate systems (they are learning signs for some objects
and words for other objects and not necessarily a sign-word relationship).
Even in the best of controlled conditions when prelingual typical developing children are presented
both systems, the signs emerge first. One hypothesis is that signs are 100% visible and spoken
language only approaches 40% visual. Greater opportunity to learn in a visual modality. Infants of
deaf parents are known to babble with their fingers without babbling vocally.
Felzer noted that hearing students who learned sign improved reading skills, spelling scores (they
finger spelled the words to themselves and this aided their memory) and general site word
vocabulary. The benefits were replicated in subsequent studies for children with MR, LD and
Autism.
Children can effectively code switch between the two systems by 18 months.
The collateral benefits include the relationship between the mom and kid, the further development
of inquiry, general reinforcement principles.
This chapter discusses individuals with hearing impairments. Definitions and concepts relating to hearing
impairment are reviewed as are classifications of hearing impairments. The chapter presents a discussion
of how hearing impairments are measured and assessed. Likewise assessments typically used to assess
other areas of educational relevance with students with hearing impairments are discussed. Differences in
pre- and post-lingual hearing impairments are summarized and a brief history of the education of students
with hearing impairments is given. Prevalence and etiologies of hearing impairments are presented along
with implications. Characteristics of individuals with hearing impairments are described in terms of
intelligence, speech and language abilities, social development, and educational achievement. Educational
considerations presented include placement decisions and instructional interventions such as methods of
communication and the use of audiologists and interpreters. Services for individuals with hearing
impairments of different ages (young children, those transitioning from school to adulthood, and adults) are
described. The chapter concludes with discussions of family and diversity issues; the use of technology
with this population; and trends, interests, and controversies involved in dealing with individuals with
hearing impairments.
Learning Objectives:
Define hearing impairment, deaf, and hard of hearing.
Distinguish between conductive and sensorineural hearing loss.
Explain the various assessment procedures used to measure hearing loss.
Describe the difference between prelingual and postlingual hearing impairments.
Outline the historical evolution of educational services for children and youth with hearing
impairments.
List possible causes of hearing loss.
Identify representative academic, social, and language characteristics of individuals with hearing
impairments.
Distinguish among oral, manual, and total communication approaches for instructing students with
hearing impairments.
Describe the concept of the Deaf culture.
Summarize educational services for persons with hearing impairments across the life span.
Explain how technology benefits individuals with hearing impairments.
Lecture Outline:
I.
Definitions and Concepts in the Field of Hearing Impairment
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
II.
III.
Outer ear: The outer ear functions to protect the middle ear, direct sound into the ear
canal, and enhance sound localization. In addition, the outer ear serves to enhance the
intensity of sounds in the mid-frequency range where the sound spectrum of speech is
located.
b.
Middle ear: Sound waves travel to the inner ear and cause vibrations that are converted in
energy.
c. Inner ear: This energy is transformed into electrical nerve impulses that are sent to the
brain for decoding.
d.
Central auditory nervous system: transmits energy to the brain for interpretation.
Classifications of Hearing Loss
IV.
a. Conductive hearing loss: Sound transmission is blocked in the middle or outer ear
b.
Sensorineural hearing loss: Involves the inner ear (cochlea) and/or the auditory nerve
c. Mixed hearing loss: Combination of conductive and sensorineural loss
d.
Central hearing loss: Dysfunction in the central nervous system
Measurement of Hearing Impairments
a.
a.
b.
c.
V.
1817: First school for students with hearing impairments (American Asylum for the
Education of the Deaf and Dumb)
1864: First college for the hearing impaired (today named Gallaudet University after
Thomas Gallaudet)
Communication methods:
i.
ii.
VI.
iii.
Total communication- combination of spoken and manual communication
Prevalence and Etiology of Hearing Impairments
a.
b.
Marked increase with age. the number of people with hearing impairment has
doubled in the last 10 years
ii. Hearing loss affects nearly 28 million people and 1 in 22 infants born the United
States have some degree of hearing impairment.
iii.
69,300 students 6-21 identified as having a hearing impairment in the 2011-2012
school year.
Etiology of Hearing Impairments
i.
VII.
Genetic/Hereditary factors
1.
Recessive and dominant traits transmitted genetically
2.
X- linked: carried by the mother
ii. Infections
1.
Can occur before (pre-), during (peri-), or after birth (post-)
iii.
Developmental abnormalities
1.
Congenital abnormalities: abnormal development of the outer or inner ear
structure
iv.
Environmental/traumatic factors
1.
Loud noise, low birth weight, medication, etc.
Characteristics of Individuals with Hearing Impairments
VIII.
i.
a.
a.
b.
IX.
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
i. Sign language
ii. Oral
iii.
Cued speech
iv.
Total communication
v.
Fingerspelling
vi. Interpreter
Signed language systems
f.
i.
X.
a.
b.
XI.
a.
XII.
b.
c.
d.
Family Issues
XIII.
XIV.
Almost 50% of all students in programs for the deaf and hearing impaired are from
culturally diverse groups (Gallaudet Research Institute, 2011)
b.
Research is needed to address the needs of students with hearing impairments who come
from non-English speaking families
c. People who identify with the Deaf culture are proud of their heritage including their
language, history, values, and literature
Technology and Individuals with Hearing Impairments
a.
a.
Hearing aids
b.
There are different types of hearing aids. Hearing aids can be tailored to amplify
incoming sounds differently rather than amplify all incoming sounds equally.
Auditory training devices
c.
Sound amplification systems used in the classroom (such as the FM system worn
by teachers to amplify his/her speech)
Computers
i.
i.
i.
d.
Alerting devices
e.
Devices can be fitted with vibrating or visual alarm systems rather than auditory
alerts (doorbells, fire alarms, wristwatches, smoke detectors, etc.)
Captioning
f.
Many TV shows and movies provide a written transcription of the spoken words
across the bottom of the screen
Telecommunication devices
g.
i.
i.
i.
ii.
XV.
a.
b.
c.
Debate continues whether children with hearing impairments should be taught oral
or signed language or use a combination of both. The childs level of hearing loss
and needs should be considered.
Move from child-centered to family-centered approach
Deaf culture
i.
i.
ii.
iii.
iv.
v.
vi.
vii.
The term Deaf (with a capital D) refers to individuals who identify with the Deaf
culture
The term deaf (lowercase d) refers to the physical condition
Culture is established through shared history, language, experiences
Deaf culture considers American Sign Language (ASL) to be the natural language
of the Deaf culture and urges recognition of ASL as the primary language choice
with English considered a second language
Advocates for the Deaf culture consider hearing loss to be nonpathological and,
therefore, not a condition requiring medical intervention. The Deaf culture asserts
that deafness is not disabling, rather it is the social and cultural factors
surrounding deafness that are disabling.
The Deaf culture does not view hearing loss as impairment and rejects the
term hearing impaired. Members of the Deaf culture are proud of their heritage
that includes language, history, values, and literature. The Deaf culture advocates
the use of ASL and rejects cochlear impacts as an attempt to correct something
d.
Key Terms
Evoked otoacoutic emissions: Sounds produced by the inner ear in response to auditory
stimulation and measured in the ear canal.
Fingerspelling: A form of manual communication; different positions or movements of the fingers
indicate letters of the alphabet.
FM systems: A wireless system that allows the transmission of a signal from the teacher wearing a
microphone to the student wearing a receiver, increasing the volume of the teachers voice over the
volume level of classroom noise.
Frequency: The number of vibrations per second of a given sound wave; typically measured as
cycles per second (cps) or hertz (Hz).
Hard of hearing: Refers to a person who has a hearing loss but uses the auditory channel as the
primary avenue for oral communication, with or without a hearing aid.
Hearing impairment: Less than normal hearing (either sensitivity or speech understanding)
resulting from auditory disorder(s).
Hearing sensitivity loss: Poorer than normal auditory sensitivity for sounds; usually measured in
decibels (dB) using pure tones.
Hertz (Hz): A unit of measurement for sound frequency, expressed as cycles per second (cps).
High-risk register: A list of factors placing infants at increased risk for hearing impairment, including,
but not limited to, low birth weight, congenital perinatal infections, a family history of childhood
hearing impairment, severe asphyxia, and bacterial meningitis.
Incus: The second of the three middle ear bones for conducting sound to the inner ear, located
between the malleus and the stapes; also called the anvil.
Inner ear: The snail-shaped part of the ear (cochlea) containing the organs of hearing and balance.
Interpreter: A professional who signs, gestures, and/or fingerspells a speakers message as it is
spoken to enable individuals with hearing impairments to understand spoken language.
Malleus: The first and largest of the three middle ear bones for conducting sound to the inner ear.
Also called the hammer, it is attached to the tympanic membrane.
Manual communication: Communication methods that utilize fingerspelling, signs, and gestures.
Middle ear: The air-filled space behind the eardrum that contains three tiny bones (ossicles) that
carry sound to the inner ear.
Mixed hearing loss: Hearing losses resulting from both conductive and sensorineural hearing
impairments.
Oral approaches: Methods of instruction for children with hearing impairments that emphasize
spoken language skills. Methodology attempts to use the childs residual hearing and employs
auditory training and speechreading.
Oral interpreter: A professional who silently repeats a speakers message as it is spoken so that a
hearing-impaired person can lip-read the message.
Organ of Corti: Organ of hearing found within the cochlea.
Ossicular chain: Three bones in the middle ear (malleus, incus, and stapes) that connect the
eardrum to the inner ear and help to amplify sounds
Otitis media: Infection of the middle ear space, causing conductive hearing loss.
Outer ear: The most visible (external) part of the ear, useful in funneling sound to the ear canal and
in localizing the source of sound
Oval window: The link between the inner ear and the middle ear.
Play audiometry: A method for measuring hearing sensitivity in young children by rewarding correct
responses; turning the evaluation situation into a game in order to maintain interest and
cooperation.
Postlingual: Referring to the period of time after a child has developed language.
Prelingual: Referring to the period of time prior to a childs development of language.
Pure-tone audiometry: A procedure for measuring hearing sensitivity at certain frequencies using
tones that are presented at various intensities.
Sensorineural hearing loss: The loss of sound sensitivity produced by abnormalities of the inner
ear or nerve pathways beyond the inner ear to the brain.
Sound field systems: A system to assist students with hearing impairments in which the teacher
wears a microphone that transmits a signal to a speaker strategically placed in the classroom
rather than to a body-worn receiver.
Speech audiometry: A set of procedures for measuring auditory perception of speech, including
syllables, words, and sentences.
Speech recognition threshold (SRT): A measure of threshold sensitivity for speech. The SRT
represents the softest sound level at which a listener can identify the stimuli 50 percent of the time.
Stapes: The third of the middle ear bones for conducting sound to the inner ear. It resembles a
stirrup in shape and is sometimes called the stirrup. It is the smallest bone in the body.
Telecommunication device for the deaf (TDD): An instrument for sending typewritten messages
over telephone lines to be received by a person who is deaf or severely hearing impaired as a
printed message. Sometimes called TT, TTY, or TTD.
Total communication: A method of communication for students with hearing impairments, designed
to provide equal emphasis on oral and signing skills to facilitate communication ability.
Transliteration: Altering an interpreted message to facilitate understanding by a person who is
hearing impaired.
Tympanic membrane: A thin, membranous tissue between the ear canal and the middle ear that
vibrates when struck by sound waves; also called the eardrum.
X-linked: A pattern of inheritance involving the X chromosome, one of an individuals two sex
chromosomes.
Quiz
1. To some individuals who are deaf and hard of hearing the word impairment is viewed as offensive
because it implies a deficiency. True
2. The term Deaf, used with a capital D, refers to individuals who want to be identified with Deaf culture.
True
3. Residual hearing describes the remaining usable hearing a person may have. True
4. Minimal hearing loss (MHL) is currently classified as a hearing impairment. False
5. A conductive hearing loss is caused by a blockage or barrier to the transmission of sound through the
inner ear. True
6. A sensorineural hearing loss is caused by disorders of the inner ear. True
7. Adventitious hearing loss is an acquired loss. True
8. A postlingual hearing impairment is present at birth or occurring before the development of speech and
language. False
9. Low achievement is characteristic of students who are deaf. True
10. Any hearing loss, whether mild or profound, appears to have detrimental effects on reading
performance. True
11. An individuals language is refined and speech is developed through a series of activities: observing,
listening, and imitating others
12. The federal definition describes deafness as a hearing loss that: adversely affects educational
performance
13. The ear is divided into four connected sections: outer ear, middle ear, inner ear, central auditory
nervous system.
14. The tympanic membrane is attached to: the malleus
15. The bridge of bones across which sound vibrations travel to the inner ear is called: the ossicular chain
16. A sensorineural hearing loss: may be congenital and may respond to medical or surgical treatment
17. The frequency of a particular sound is a measure of the rate at which the sound source vibrates and is
measured in: hertz
18. Disorders associated with hearing loss in children include: cytomegalovirus, meningitis, Ushers
syndrome, down syndrome and ototoxicity
19. The primary objective of an assessment of individuals with a hearing impairment is to: put together an
accurate picture of cognitive, communicative, and personal characteristics
20. Language assessment for individuals with hearing impairments should examine: both receptive and
expressive communication skills
21. Which of the following is an inappropriate setting for individuals with a hearing impairment? private
schools mental institutions
22. One method of classifying hearing impairment is by degree of the loss
23. Individuals with a moderate hearing loss may experience: significant delays in speech and language
24. Suggestions for teaching students with hearing impairments included all except: have the student leave
class early for the next class
Additional exercises