Module E
Module E
Module E
MODULE 5
LEARNERS WITH INTELLECTUAL DISABILITIES
Introduction
Children at risk for success in school include learners with intellectual disabilities. These children with
intellectual disabilities or mental retardation suffer from limitation both in intellectual functioning and in
adaptive behavior as shown in conceptual, social, and practical adaptive skills. Module 5 discusses the
characteristics of these children and how they may be identified and helped in the classroom.
I. Objectives. The readings in this module will enable the students to:
1. Define the concepts of intelligence and adaptive behavior and intellectual disabilities
2. Give examples of conceptual, social and practical adaptive skills
3. Describe the learning and behavioral characteristics of learners with intellectual disabilities.
4. Define learning disabilities
1. Definition of intellectual disabilities, intelligence and adaptive behavior. Here are some
authorities’ definition of intellectual disabilities:
The most defining characteristics of someone identified as having intellectual disabilities is impaired
cognitive functioning. Many factors influence individual behavior and functioning, such as chronological
age, the severity of disability, the causes, and educational opportunities.
Students with intellectual disabilities are more like their typical classmates than they are different,
sharing many of the same social, emotional, and physical needs. Furthermore, pupils with intellectual
disabilities, especially those with less severe limitations, learn in the same way as the average or typical
student; albeit, at a slower rate.
Students with lower IQ affects his/her ability to learn, acquire concepts, process information, and apply
knowledge in various settings such as school, home and community. Because learning is not a unitary
variable – it is composed of many interrelated cognitive processes – is can be analyzed in several
dimensions as shown in Table 2.
Table 2. Representative Learning and Behavioral Characteristics of Learners with Intellectual Disabilities
Student with learning disabilities are found in almost all classrooms. They are known or called by
many different names – slow learner, remedial reader, dyslexic hyperactive, etc. The US Office
of Education came up with the following official definition:
BOX B
“Specific learning disability” means a disorder in one or more of the basic psychological
processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written, which may
manifest itself in an imperfect ability to listen, speak, read, write, spell, or to do mathematical
calculations. The term includes such conditions as perceptual handicaps, brain injury,
minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and developmental aphasia. The term does not include
children who have learning disabilities which are primarily the result of visual, hearing, or
motor handicaps, or mental retardation, or emotional disturbance, or of environmental,
cultural or economic disadvantage (U.S. Office of Education).
The same Office issued the regulations and operational guidelines that were to be used by
professionals as the criteria for identifying pupils suspected of having a learning disability.
A team may determine that a child has a specific learning disability if:
(1) The child does not achieve commensurate with his or her age and ability levels in one
or more of the areas listed in (a) (2) of this section, when provided with learning
experiences appropriate for the child’s age and ability levels, and intellectual ability in
one or more of the following areas:
(i) Oral expression
(ii) Listening comprehension
(iii) Written expression
(iv) Basic reading skill
(v) Reading comprehension
(vi) Mathematics calculation; or
(vii) Mathematics reasoning (U.S. Office of Education)
4.B. Selected Learning and Behavioral Characteristics of Learners with Learning Disabilities include the
following:
Disorders of attention
Poor motor abilities
Psychological processing deficits and information-processing problems
Short- and long-term memory problems
Impaired metacognition
Oral language difficulties
Phonological awareness deficiencies
Written language problems
Quantitative disorders
Social skills deficits (Friend, 2011; Hallahan, Kauffman, & Pullen, 2012).
IV. Application: