History
Dyslexia
Dyscalculia
Assessment
Other Learning Disabilities
100
In 1963, he introduced the term "learning disability" and is considered the Father of Special Education.
Who is Dr. Samuel Kirk?
100
The severe difficulty in learning to read. It is characterized by difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition and by poor spelling and decoding abilities.
What is dyslexia?
100
It is when a student has severe problems with mathematics. It is a neurologically based disorder of mathematical abilities.
What is dyscalculia?
100
A three-tiered, standards-aligned strategy provided in general education classrooms which provides instruction and interventions to match the needs of students.
What is Response to Intervention and Instruction (RtII)?
100
A writing disorder in which impacts a child's handwriting.
What is dysgraphia?
200
He was the first to use the term "dyslexia" in 1887. He described dyslexia as "a very great difficulty in interpreting written or printed symbols."
Who is German Physician, Rudolf Berlin?
200
The three core deficits of dyslexia.
What is Phonological Deficit, Naming-Speed Deficit, and Orthographic Deficit?
200
Research indicates this percentage of the school-aged population has dyscalculia.
What is at least 6%?
200
A student is described as having a learning disability if the child's score on an IQ test is at least ___ standard deviation(s) higher than his or her scores on an achievement test,
What is two?
200
A communication disorder which disrupts normal language development that is disrupted by cortical lesion, seizure, or stroke. It is often caused by injuries or illnesses.
What is acquired aphasia?
300
This was originally popularized by Barbara Bateman in 1964. It is a key component and is considered to be the common denominator of learning disabilities. It is used by many states today to determine if a learning disability is present in a child.
What is the discrepancy model?
300
It is a learning disorder in which symbols and especially letters, words, and phrases are transposed or reversed when reading. It used to be called word blindness and it occurs in 5% of dyslexics.
What is strephosymbolia?
300
One of the most popular frameworks that is used to teach mathematics. For this method, math instruction should start with activities, moving to representational activities, and finish with more abstract activities.
What is the CRA Sequence?
300
The first intelligence test which became the template for all the intelligence tests we use today.
What is the Binet-Simon Scale?
300
A language disorder in children caused by central nervous dysfunction.
What is developmental or childhood aphasia?
400
In 1975, this law was passed giving learning disabilities official status as a category eligible for funding for direct services. It also states that the term “specific learning disability” means a disorder in one or more of the 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. (USOE, 1977, p. 65083)
What is Public Law 94-142, the Education for All Handicapped Children Act?
400
Jumbling of sounds in words or speech, delayed speech development, confusing words signifying direction in space, difficulty with movements, difficulty with everyday activities such as putting on shoes, buttoning, zippering, and difficulty with behavior and low frustration level?
What are the early signs of dyslexia in children?
400
Direct instruction is teacher centered and it focuses on helping students learn all the skills and concepts. Strategy instruction is student centered and it teaches students how to learn the information and when to use the information. Learning strategies are taught during strategy instruction and it teaches students how to organize the information so it can be retrieved.
What are the differences between direct instruction, strategy instruction, and learning strategies in teaching mathematics?
400
1. Teachers are not properly trained to implement this approach. 2. There is a few criteria for distinguishing between "no response to instruction" and "marginal response to instruction," making it difficult to accomplish consistent implementation. 3. It is difficult to establish when a child should move to another tier. 4. This approach fails to document underachievement/unexpected learning failure, which is an important feature of learning disabilities.
What is the criticisms of RtII?
400
A disorder that makes it difficult for a person to process and remember language-related tasks. Children with this disorder hear things differently because their ears and brain do not fully coordinate.
What is Central Auditory Processing Disorder (CAPD)?
500
A team may determine if a child has a specific learning disability if they find that the child has a severe discrepancy between achievement and intellectual ability in these seven areas.
What is oral expression, listening comprehension, written expression, basic reading skill, reading comprehension, mathematics calculation, or mathematics reasoning?
500
The difference between analytic (implicit) phonics and synthetic (explicit) phonics.
What is analytic (implicit) phonics examines letter and sound patterns across words and synthetic (explicit) phonics breaks each word into individual phonemes?
500
Dr. Ladislav Kosc identified dyscalculia in 1974 and these six types of dyscalculia.
What is Lexical Dyscalculia, Graphical Dyscalculia, Verbal Dyscalculia, Ideognostic Dyscalculia, Practognostic Dyscalculia, Operational Dyscalculia?
500
The differences between tier 1, tier 2, and tier 3 in the Response to Intervention and Instruction approach.
What is at tier 1, students are taught using differentiated instruction. Students are screened at this stage. At tier 2, students work in smaller groups on specific skills. Progress monitoring of students occurs at least one time a month. At tier 3, students work with a specialist and have a different curriculum.
500
A disorder that affects motor coordination. Children with this disorder may have trouble planning or completing fine motor tasks.
What is dyspraxia?
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