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Learning Disabilities Gary L. Cates ,Ph.D. N.C.S.P Illinois State University
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Learning Disabilities

Jan 23, 2016

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Learning Disabilities. Gary L. Cates ,Ph.D. N.C.S.P Illinois State University. What is a learning disability?. Take a moment and write down your answer. Kirk (1963). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Learning Disabilities

Learning Disabilities

Gary L. Cates ,Ph.D. N.C.S.P

Illinois State University

Page 2: Learning Disabilities

What is a learning disability?

• Take a moment and write down your answer.

Page 3: Learning Disabilities

Kirk (1963)

• "Children with special learning disabilities exhibit a disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using spoken or written language. These may be manifested in disorders of listening, thinking, talking, reading, writing, spelling, or arithmetic. They include conditions which have been referred to as perceptual handicaps, brain injury, minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, developmental aphasia, etc. they do not include learning problems which are due primarily to visual, hearing, or motor handicaps, to mental retardation, emotional disturbance or to environmental deprivation."

Page 4: Learning Disabilities

National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities (1989)

• Learning disabilities is a generic term that refers to a heterogenous group of disorders manifested by significant difficulties in the acquisition and use of listening, speaking, reading, writing, reasoning, or mathematical abilities. These disorders are intrinsic to the individual, presumed to be due to central nervous system dysfunction, and may occur across the life span. Problems in self-regulatory behaviors, social perception, and social interaction may exist with learning disabilities but do not by themselves constitute a learning disability. Although a learning disability may occur concomitantly with other handicapping conditions (for example, sensory impairment, mental retardation, serious emotional disturbance) or with extrinsic factors (such as cultural differences, insufficient or inappropriate instruction), they are not the result of those conditions or influences

Page 5: Learning Disabilities

Learning Disability

• Disorder in one or more of the 5 psychological processes (i.e. central nervous system dysfunction) that:

• Interferes with learning daily living

• Is life long

• Not a result of lack of educational opportunity

Page 6: Learning Disabilities

Associated Features

• 2-10% (Schools shoot about 5.5%)

• Mostly Male (80% of reading problems)

• 10-25% have behavior disorder

• Related to but not predicted by medical issues

Page 7: Learning Disabilities

Terms?

• Reading Disability• Specific Learning Disability• Reading Disorder• Reading Skill Deficit• Dyslexia• Dyscalcula• Dysgraphia• LD coined by Kirk (1963)

Page 8: Learning Disabilities

Learning Disability Diagnosis

• Discrepancy between IQ and Achievement– 15, 20, 25, 30 pts?

• Processing problem demonstrated or not?

Page 9: Learning Disabilities

Criteria - Illinois

• Not Achieving Adequately: Age or state level standards AND

• Not improving sufficient progress AND

• Educational Needs significantly different

• Exclusionary Criteria– Hearing, vision, cognitive, emotional, cultural,

disadvantage, Limited English

Page 10: Learning Disabilities

Empirical Diagnosis

Gary L. Cates, Ph.D., N.C.S.P.

Page 11: Learning Disabilities

Let’s Calculate Discrepancy

• IQ - Achievement100 – 85 = 15

• This assumes 1 to 1 relationship r = 1.0 100% variance explained of achievement explained by IQ

Page 12: Learning Disabilities

What about the correlation between the tests?

• The weaker the correlation (i.e. predictive validity of IQ) for a specific achievement test the more likely you are to identify a child without a “true” discrepancy.

• So what we need to know is the correlation between the two instruments

• Problem? Most instruments don’t provide this information because it is not collected!

Page 13: Learning Disabilities

Here is the Formula for regressing a score

Regressed score = (Correlation*Z )

Remember:

Z = (Score – Mean)/ SD

Page 14: Learning Disabilities

We can estimate Correlations between the two tests if is not

known using the following formula

.7071 is a constantrxx is the inter-item correlation of test 1ryy is the inter-item correlation of test 2

Page 15: Learning Disabilities

Plug all those numbers into this formula

Page 16: Learning Disabilities

Let’s do one together

Page 17: Learning Disabilities

What you know

• Student Scores 85 on WIAT and 100 on

K-ABC.• Inter-item correlation

on reading comprehension on the WIAT is .88

• Inter-item correlation on K-ABC ~ .91

Page 18: Learning Disabilities

What do you come up with?

• Does the child have a discrepancy?

• This still does not include the standard error of measurement being factored in.

Page 19: Learning Disabilities

Let’s calculate discrepancy another way

• Student scores 75 wcpm on CBM reading probe

• Peers score 115 wcpm on same CBM reading probe

• The formula is Peer performance

_________________________

Target student performance

Page 20: Learning Disabilities

Is it a significant discrepancy?

• Rule of thumb 2x, 1.5x

• Ensures that within a district a child in the same curriculum as the normative sample gets services if they are significantly below this normative sample

• If the student’s performance is discrepant then services are provided and the rate of performance gap monitored.

Page 21: Learning Disabilities

Another level of Discrepancy

• Adequate Progress (monitoring the gap)– E.g. student is making .9 words per minute

gains per week and the normative group mean for words per minute gain is 1.5 this is inadequate performance.

– E.g. student is making 1.9 words per minute gains per week and the normative group mean for words per minute gain is 1.5 this is adequate performance.

Page 22: Learning Disabilities

Another Analysis

• Nearly 75% of patients with left TLE, whereas fewer than 10% of those with right TLE, had at least one learning disability (reading comprehension/Written Expression).

• Brainstem Timing: Implications for Cortical Processing and Literacy (Benai, 2005)

• Smaller cortical volume (Cassanova, 2004)– What do you make of this?

Page 23: Learning Disabilities

Treatments for Learning Disorder/Disability

Page 24: Learning Disabilities

Aptitude By Treatment Interactions

• Learning Styles

• Differential Diagnosis-Prescriptive teaching (DD-PT)– Anter & Jenkins (1979)– Cronbach & Snow (1977): Meta analysis– Ayers & Cooley (1986): K-ABC– Good et al. (1993): K-ABC revisted