Physical/Health disabilities
Deaf/Blindness
Autism
Intellectual Disabilities
Low Incidence Disabilities
100
A condition related to physical deformity or impairment of the skeletal system and associated motor function.
What is a physical disability?
100
Hearing losses that impair understanding of sounds and communication.
What is hard of hearing?
100
A group of disorders with similar characteristics including difficulties with communication, social, interaction, and manneristic behaviors.
What is the autism spectrum disorders (ASD)?
100
An impaired intellectual functioning, limited adaptive behavior, need for supports, and initial occurrence before the age 18.
What is an intellectual disability?
100
Head injury, causing reduced cognitive functioning, limited attention, and impulsivity.
What is traumatic brain injury?
200
A condition related to chronic or acute problems resulting in limited strength, vitality, or alertness.
What is a health disability?
200
Impairments with vision that affect educational performance, access to the community, and independence.
What is a visual disability?
200
An individual who displays many behaviors associated with autism yet also possesses discrete abilities and unusual talents.
What is autistic savant?
200
The three defining characteristics of individual's with intellectual disabilities.
What is impairment of cognition skills, adaptive behavior, and needing supports to sustain independence.
200
Sign language for individuals with deaf-blindness where signs are conveyed through touch.
What is hand over hand?
300
The two major groups of physical disabilities.
What are neuromotor impairments and muscular/skeletal conditions?
300
Having lost the ability to hear before developing language.
What is prelingually deaf?
300
The three syndromes of ASD.
What is autism, asperger syndrome, and pervasive developmental disorder?
300
The four levels of intensity for systems of support.
What are the intermittent, limited, extensive, and pervasive levels?
300
The data based practice used for low incidence disabilities students that uses natural settings related to life and vocational skills.
What is functional curriculum?
400
The two types of health disabilities.
What are chronic illnesses and infectious diseases?
400
A method of instructing students with hearing loss that employs any and all methods of communication.
What is the total communication approach?
400
The data based practiced that is a three-tiered model of support offering progressively more intensive levels of intervention.
What is positive behavior support?
400
The data based practice most helpful for students with intellectual disabilities that involves the student making decisions, choosing preferences, and exercising self-advocacy needed for independent living.
What is self-determination?
400
Problems transferring or generalizing learning, limited communication skills, difficulties with memory, needs for supports for many life's activities and needs for services from many different service providers.
What are characteristics of multiple severe disabilities?
500
A momentary loss of awareness, sometimes accompanied by blinking or movements of the face or arms and may be frequent.
What is an absence seizure?
500
Curriculum targets for students that are visually impaired.
What are life skills, skills for independence, literacy, and orientation and mobility?
500
Social communication impairment and repetitive/restrictive behavior categories.
What are the two categories of symptoms of individuals with Autism?
500
The money concepts, self-direction, reading and writing skills in everyday life.
What is the conceptual adaptive skill area?
500
The age at which students with low incidence disabilities leave school.
What is the age of 21
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