Assessment
Your Special Education Binder
For those of you involved in any level of special education negotiations for your child, whether it be for a 504 Plan or an IEP, the likelihood is you are accumulating quite a paper trail. Accumulating (probably in a folder), are all the IEP’s, standardized test reports, medical evaluations, school email correspondences, etc., that have taken a dent out of the rain forest.
- Pull out all of the reports and papers that you have accumulated and sort them into categories, i.e., IEP’s, previous reports, standardized test results, report cards, email correspondence, or any other such category that seems to emerge.
- Put the papers in chronological order with the oldest material on the bottom to the newest on top.
- Put all of these into your new special education binder in the appropriate sections..
504 Plans: Keep Them Simple or They Will Be Ignored
“504” plans have been so much a part of the school landscape for many years that we forget that the “504” did not originate with schools. 504 is part of the ADA legislation. The guiding principle of 504 is that reasonable accommodations would help to “level the playing field” for those with disabilities in the workplace or school.
Nonverbal Learning Disability – “NLD” in a Nutshell
Terminology in the field of psychology and education can be very off-putting. Too often jargon is tossed around that few people really understand. My test for jargon would be if the average person on the street doesn’t know what a term means, then it is jargon. I can guarantee you if you asked 100 people what “NLD or Nonverbal Learning Disability” meant, most would be scratching their heads. Even for professionals in the field of education and psychology the term can be confusing. What follows is NLD in a jargon free nutshell.
The nutshell view is that children who are NLD have considerable strengths clustering on their verbal abilities. These children are very facile verbally. They have a storehouse of information that is readily answered when asked verbal questions. Their vocabulary knowledge is broad.
On the other side of the coin, the NLD kids struggle with a range of tasks that are nonverbal in nature, hence the term – “Nonverbal Learning Disability.” These kids tend not to do well with spatial tasks such as putting blocks together to match patterns or while analyzing different visual patterns. While this difficulty can affect their academic functioning, more importantly, the NLD kids struggle in the social arena. Why? When interacting socially, so much of the interaction is visual (nonverbal) in nature involving the “reading” and interpreting of a variety of cues and stimuli in the environment.
The pie chart to the right illustrates this well.
As the chart shows, at least 55% of communication skills involves non-verbal communication. Is it any wonder that if you are in the 5th – 10th percentile of nonverbal intelligence, you will struggle greatly in the social arena?
Take young Matthew, a boy I met when he was 5, who is now in middle school. From a young age Matthew was a storehouse of knowledge and verbal abilities, obtaining a 138 Verbal IQ (99th percentile). This was contrasted with a 1st percentile score in the nonverbal domain. All of the years that I have known Matthew, social interaction has been a struggle that few have understood.
Here are his father’s words about how Matthew does in the social arena:
“Being Matthew is like living in a social purgatory, wanting to be social but lacking an understanding how to go about it. How do I protect my son? How do I ensure he gets social/emotional support? Does anyone on Matthew’s team really understand the crippling social effects caused by the way he’s wired?”
Matthew will need a lot of support, particularly in situations that are less structured, such as the playground and lunch room. He will need to have an adult with whom he can “anchor” and feel a confident connection.
Whether he gets such support or not is another story.
MY HEAD IS ABOUT TO EXPLODE HEARING THESE THINGS!
Modern parents make you nostalgic for the good old days. You know, the days when children went outside to play and basically didn’t see their mother for a solid 8 hours (except when she made you a nutritious bologna on Wonderbread sandwich, before your ran back out the door after wolfing it down).
Now it’s, so much parental steering and interfering. Parents are so self-conscious in the way they interact with their children
Just spend a few minutes in the mall or a supermarket:
"That’s not your indoor voice." (Ugh.)
"Remember not to run ahead, ok?" (Oh, that’s effective.)
"It’s our special day. Mommy’s so happy to be with you." (As the kid is charging ahead.)
"Now you know you shouldn’t use your whining voice." (Your whining voice????)
"Where are your listening ears?" (Huh????)
Or as parents report to me about the way things are going in the house, their language reveals how things will go:
"Don’t you think it’s time we started our homework?" (No!!!!!!!)
"Isn’t it time that we go to bed?" (We????)
"It’s time for us to brush our teeth." (What????????)
We have a serious case of NBD running through modern parenting – No Backbone Disorder!!!!
I think my head will explode if I hear one more of these things.
I am getting cranky again.
MESSAGES FROM THE LIFE BOATS
Last week we talked about the "Curriculm Ship" that leaves the dock in September, plowing forward until it reaches its destiny. That some have fallen off the ship appears to be immaterial. The ship must proceed.
The blog generated a fair amount of reaction from teachers and parents.
The first is from an elementary school teacher:
"Hence the creation of "differentiated instruction" which on paper sounds great but when dealing with 26 + in a classroom the likelihood of a teacher, even a veteran teacher doing this successfully is not good. We need to look at the curriculum and possibly go back to the A & B classes so that children are not hampered by slower learners and slower learners can feel as if they can succeed at their own pace.
Another came Amy, a fourth grade teacher;
"I just wanted to let you know that the Curriculum Ship blog was a great analogy for my students. It is so true – we are merely keeping them afloat, hoping that they will hang in there…It is sad, but true, that some of my students will let go of the preserver soon. While they may make it in 5th grade, they probably won’t much more after that!"
From Pat, a mother of 12 year old who has struggled over the years, she said:
"It’s too bad that parents aren’t tutored in knowing what size life preservers to keep on hand for their children! As the curriculum gets more difficult, it seems the theory of "one size fits all" for the curriculum could not be more in error! If this ship is sailing along steadily, ignoring who has gone overboard, you would think someone would notice and sound an alarm! Instead, we blame the child for not trying hard enough – and treading water in deep seas will only keep you alive for so long!"
All of these points are very valid, I believe. The "differentiated instruction" theory while still very popular, would seem to be extraordinarily difficult for a teacher. Staying with the water metaphor, how does one work with a group in the deep end of the pool, while others are floundering on the other side in the shallow end? I guess, as Amy says, you are just trying to keep them afloat, but that isn’t very satisfying, is it? The sanctity of the curriculum and its "one size fits all" nature is also frustrating to the strugglers. They just can’t keep up.
Well, in the coming weeks try and enjoy the holiday season – we will get back to teeth gnashing after the first of the year!.
THE BLIND MEN & THE ELEPHANT: (Dissecting Childhood)
"It was six men of Indostan
To learning much inclined,
Who went to see the Elephant
Though all of them were blind,
That each by observation
Might satisfy his mind."
The above comes from the parable of the Blind Men and the Elephant. A group of blind (or men in the dark) touch an elephant to learn what it is like. Each one touches a different part, but only one part, such as the side or the tusk. Of course, each describes the elephant quite differently from their perspective.
Sometimes I feel like we are doing the same with children. Different professionals will identify a certain part of the “elephant” and recommend a treatment from that point of view.
Recently a mom came in to discuss her very pleasant, but struggling 8 year old daughter, Samantha, who had seen many professionals over a two year period.
“So, what was recommended?” I ask.
“Since kindergarten we’ve been on this two year mission to help her,” the mom said. “She just isn’t making progress in reading and the gap is widening.
We first saw an OT who felt there were “sensory issues.” She felt Sam should get Interactive Metronome therapy. Then we read about special colored lenses for reading and found a person in NY who specializes in tinted lens treatment, which she recommended for Samantha. An audiologist then found a central auditory processing disorder and recommend that we go to her office for a year’s computer treatment to address the “auditory issues.” The neurologist we saw wants her on medication. Dietary supplements and spinal manipulation were recommended by the chiropractor. Then there was the “train the brain” program offered at the nearby learning center.
I really have no idea what to do and am overwhelmed by all of this. I just want her to learn how to read better. ”
If reading is the primary concern, then Sam’s mother should seek good reading instruction. It’s common sense.
To hit a tennis ball better, you wouldn’t go for swimming lessons. Why is reading any different? It’s a skill that can be taught and practiced.
Maybe dissecting the elephant so much is not that helpful.
Tags: Learning disabilities, Learning Therapies, Parent Concerns
“DADDY’S TIED UP IN TRAFFIC”
Many shut-down learner kids, have great trouble with different facets of language that we often take for granted.
Take Emma, age 8. The other night, Emma was told by her mother that her father was “tied up in traffic.” Emma burst into tears. “Why is daddy being tied up,” she sobbed.
It took her mother some time to explain to Emma that her father wasn’t literally being tied up and that it was an expression commonly used when people are stuck in traffic.
So many kids have difficulty with the subtle and not so subtle aspects of language. They can be easily overloaded with too many words hitting them with no place to store such words and language in their mental closet.
We use language very freely and quite often it is just washing over the kid’s head.
Is it any wonder that so many shut-down learner style kids appear distracted and zoned out in class?
So, if your child is not steering her boat or is wandering in the desert aimlessly or spinning her wheels in the mud, perhaps you need to back up and check out your language !!!!!
Perhaps you are using too many metaphors!
LEARNING DISABILITIES IN THE MIDEAST: NOT SO DIFFERENT THAN ANYWHERE ELSE
I know it’s been some time since I last posted. A lot has been going on that has kept me from writing, not the least of which was my taking part in the “TeachME” conference in Dubai on 11/11 & 11/12/09. “TeachME” is sponsored by the Rearden Educational company based in Lebanon. For the conference, Reardon brought together 15 international trainers and 25 talks over the two days of the conference.
All of the trainers were responsible for presenting four different nearly two hour workshops on a variety of topics and two one hour talks. Needless to say there was a fair amount of pressure hanging over my head over the past three months as I tried to get ready for the conference.
The workshops that I presented were:
o The Shut Down Learner: Understanding the Academically Discouraged Child
o Diagnostic Indicators of the Stages of Reading Development: Signposts to Guide Instruction
o “We Keep Telling Him You’ve Got to Get Organized…You’ve Got to Get Organized”: Understanding Executive Function Deficits in Practical Terms
o “Mom, Why Won’t Anyone Play With Me?” : The Often Unspoken Side of Learning Disabilities & Shut Down Learners
The two that I gave were:
o Relationship: The Key Variable in Providing Emotional Fuel to Struggling Children With Learning Disabilities
o Shut-Down Learners: Adult Perspectives
The participants were educators from various countries in the Middle East Region. While they may have raised some issues that were unique to their particular country or the cultural group they were teaching, so many of the issues were the common ones we face here in the United States.
o How do you motivate the unmotivated?
o What is the role of parents?
o How do we teach literacy in a world that increasingly values technology over skills such as reading, spelling and writing?
o What are the best methods to approach struggling children?
Just like educators experience in conferences here in the U.S., the participants probably walked away from the conference not having all of their questions answered, but it was nice to see that we were all talking the same language.
To learn more about the “TeachME” 2009 conference in Dubai, as well as their upcoming conference in Beirut, go to: http://www.teachmeconference.com/
IQ ADDING TO MY “GQ”
Even though I am a psychologist who does a great deal of testing, I find the overuse of the IQ adds to my GQ (“Grumpiness Quotient”).
Why does the IQ score make me grumpy?
- Children who are in need of service, often don’t receive it because of the Full Scale IQ. Schools will often overplay the interaction of the IQ with overall achievement, with the result that many struggling children do not receive what they need. Essentially, their “IQ” is not far enough away from achievement based on discrepancy models.
- IQ scores are misunderstood by many. There still is the mistaken notion that each of carries around a score stamped on our brains summarizing our abilities.
The Full Scale IQ is an average. Averages often don’t tell the story.
Let’s say there are a number of houses on your street. Four of them have yearly income around $50,000. There is one family on the block who makes 1.5 million dollars. What’s the average income for your street? Even my poor math skills tells me that you will feel misrepresented by stating the “average” income for the street.
Well, the same is often true of IQ. IQ is an averaging index. Each child’s profile is an array of highs and lows that combine to generate an IQ score. There could be literally 100 children each with an exact IQ score of 100, yet each would show a very different profile of strengths and weaknesses – highs and lows.
Mind you, the WISC-IV (one of the major test that psychologists use in assessing children) is a wonderful test that yields very rich information, the least of which being the Full Scale IQ.
Overplaying the IQ and not understanding or focusing on the different areas being assessed and their implication for learning, is a huge mistake too often made.
tags: Assessing learning disabilties; Intelligence Testing, Cognitive Testing.