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A Glossary of Special Education Terms
Accommodations. Techniques
and materials that allow individuals with LD to complete school or work
tasks with greater ease and effectiveness. Examples include spellcheckers,
tape recorders, and expanded time for completing assignments.
Assistive Technology.
Equipment that enhances the ability of students and employees to be more
efficient and successful. For individuals with LD, computer grammar checkers,
an overhead projector used by a teacher, or the audiovisual information
delivered through a CD-ROM would be typical examples.
Attention Deficit Disorder
(ADD). A severe difficulty in focusing and maintaining attention. Often
leads to learning and behavior problems at home, school, and work. Also
called Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD).
Brain Imaging Techniques.
Recently developed, noninvasive techniques for studying the activity of
living brains. Includes brain electrical activity mapping (BEAM), computerized
axial tomography (CAT), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Brain Injury. The physical
damage to brain tissue or structure that occurs before, during, or after
birth that is verified by EEG, MRI, CAT, or a similar examination, rather
than by observation of performance. When caused by an accident, the damage
may be called Traumatic Brain Injury
(TBI).
Collaboration. A program
model in which the LD teacher demonstrates for or team teaches with the
general classroom teacher to help a student with LD be successful in a
regular classroom.
Developmental Aphasia.
A severe language disorder that is presumed to be due to brain injury
rather than because of a developmental delay in the normal acquisition
of language.
Direct Instruction. An
instructional approach to academic subjects that emphasizes the use of
carefully sequenced steps that include demonstration, modeling, guided
practice, and independent application.
Dyscalculia. A severe
difficulty in understanding and using symbols or functions needed for
success in mathematics.
Dysgraphia. A severe difficulty
in producing handwriting that is legible and written at an age-appropriate
speed.
Dyslexia. A severe difficulty
in understanding or using one or more areas of language, including listening,
speaking, reading, writing, and spelling.
Dysnomia. A marked difficulty
in remembering names or recalling words needed for oral or written language.
Dyspraxia. A severe difficulty
in performing drawing, writing, buttoning, and other tasks requiring fine
motor skill, or in sequencing the necessary movements.
Learned Helplessness.
A tendency to be a passive learner who depends on others for decisions
and guidance. In individuals with LD, continued struggle and failure can
heighten this lack of self-confidence.
Learning Modalities. Approaches
to assessment or instruction stressing the auditory, visual, or tactile
avenues for learning that are dependent upon the individual.
Learning Strategy Approaches.
Instructional approaches that focus on efficient ways to learn, rather
than on curriculum. Includes specific techniques for organizing, actively
interacting with material, memorizing, and monitoring any content or subject.
Learning Styles. Approaches
to assessment or instruction emphasizing the variations in temperament,
attitude, and preferred manner of tackling a task. Typically considered
are styles along the active/passive, reflective/impulsive, or verbal/spatial
dimensions.
Locus of Control. The
tendency to attribute success and difficulties either to internal factors
such as effort or to external factors such as chance. Individuals with
learning disabilities tend to blame failure on themselves and achievement
on luck, leading to frustration and passivity.
Metacognitive Learning.
Instructional approaches emphasizing awareness of the cognitive processes
that facilitate one's own learning and its application to academic and
work assignments. Typical metacognitive techniques include systematic
rehearsal of steps or conscious selection among strategies for completing
a task.
Minimal Brain Dysfunction (MBD).
A medical and psychological term originally used to refer to the learning
difficulties that seemed to result from identified or presumed damage
to the brain. Reflects a medical, rather than educational or vocational
orientation.
Multisensory Learning.
An instructional approach that combines auditory, visual, and tactile
elements into a learning task. Tracing sandpaper numbers while saying
a number fact aloud would be a multisensory learning activity.
Neuropsychological Examination.
A series of tasks that allow observation of performance that is presumed
to be related to the intactness of brain function.
Perceptual Handicap. Difficulty
in accurately processing, organizing, and discriminating among visual,
auditory, or tactile information. A person with a perceptual handicap
may say that "cap/cup" sound the same or that "b"
and "d" look the same. However, glasses or hearing aids do not
necessarily indicate a perceptual handicap.
Prereferral Process. A
procedure in which special and regular teachers develop trial strategies
to help a student showing difficulty in learning remain in the regular
classroom.
Resource Program. A program
model in which a student with LD is in a regular classroom for most of
each day, but also receives regularly scheduled individual services in
a specialized LD resource classroom.
Self-Advocacy. The development
of specific skills and understandings that enable children and adults
to explain their specific learning disabilities to others and cope positively
with the attitudes of peers, parents, teachers, and employers.
Specific Language Disability
(SLD). A severe difficulty in some aspect of listening, speaking,
reading, writing, or spelling, while skills in the other areas are age-appropriate.
Also called Specific Language Learning Disability (SLLD).
Specific Learning Disability
(SLD). The official term used in federal legislation to refer to
difficulty in certain areas of learning, rather than in all areas of learning.
Synonymous with learning disabilities.
Subtype Research. A recently
developed research method that seeks to identify characteristics that
are common to specific groups within the larger population of individuals
identified as having learning disabilities.
Transition. Commonly used
to refer to the change from secondary school to postsecondary programs,
work, and independent living typical of young adults. Also used to describe
other periods of major change such as from early childhood to school or
from more specialized to mainstreamed settings.
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