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Multiple Disabilities (not severe). Concomitant impairments (such as MR-blindness, MR-orthopedic impairment, etc.), the combination of which causes such severe educational problems that they cannot be accommodated in special education programs solely for one of the impairments. The term does not inc
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1. Severe and Multiple Disabilities Chapter 9
2. Multiple Disabilities (not severe) Concomitant impairments (such as MR-blindness, MR-orthopedic impairment, etc.), the combination of which causes such severe educational problems that they cannot be accommodated in special education programs solely for one of the impairments. The term does not include deaf-blindness. (IDEA)
3. Severe Disabilities (not multiple) Refers to children with disabilities who, because of the intensity of their physical, mental, or emotional problems, needs highly specialized education, social, psychological, and medical services in order to maximize their full potential for useful and meaningful participation in society and for self-fulfillment. The term includes those children….who have two or more serious disabilities such as deaf-blindness, mental retardation and blindness and cerebral palsy and deafness.
4. Common Characteristics 1.) extent of support required by students across all adaptive skill areas is usually extensive or pervasive
2.) two or more disabilities typically occurring simultaneously.
5. Describing The Characteristics single definition for Severe/Multiple disabilities very difficult
in fact the differences among people with Severe/Multiple disabilities may be greater than the similarities
five categories in characteristics helped describe the students
6. Intellectual Functioning
may vary widely in their academic skills
many have significant impairments in intellectual functioning
assessment methodology is inappropriate for many
normative samples are problem
exposure to academic content may be lacking
7. Adaptive Skills
includes conceptual, social, and practical competency for functioning and community settings in an age-consistent way
majority of population attain some level of independence
8. Motor Development usually significant delay in motor development
sensorimotor impairment may result in abnormal muscle tone
increased muscle tension and extremely tight muscles resulting in spasticity
9. Sensory Impairments hearing and vision impairments are common with population
2 of every 5 students have sensory impairments
deaf-blind have varying combinations of vision and hearing impairments
box 9-1 page 259 has suggestions for communication
10. Communication Skills
almost all experience communication challenges
many use argumentative communication devices
11. Causes no one single identifiable cause for 30 to 40 % of children born with severe/multiple disabilities
majority of known cases relate to prenatal biomedical factors
also complications during birth and after birth
12. Genetic Metabolic Disorders abnormality in a parent's genes can cause disorder in the child's metabolism
refers to energy, growth and waste disposal which really means a person's chemical process, breaks down toxins (poisons) and moves nutrients in the bloodstream
dysfunction can be catastrophic
lack of conversion to useful substances accumulate to toxic levels - damaging fetus’ physical and mental development
13. Phenylketonuria (PKU) is the absence of enzyme necessary to convert essential amino acid to different amino acid. The result is mental retardation if not treated within the first few weeks of life
2 recessive must be present. two parents have a child together and both have to recessive gene there's a 1 in 4 chances for child to be affected
14. Preventing
advances in prenatal testing such as amniocentesis, chorionic villi sampling, and umbilical blood sampling, help identify possibly prevent multiple disabilities through fetal therapy
prenatal fetal therapy such as in-utero surgery is rapidly expanding
15. Identify The Prevalence
in 2001 there were 112,993 students ages 6 to 21 serve with multiple disabilities (.18 % of all students served under IDEA)
an additional 1454 students with deaf-blindness
no information on those identified with severe disabilities because IDEA does not serve that population under a separate category
16. Determining The Presence
most are detected at birth through Apgar test
the physician ranks a child on the five physical traits: heart rate, respiratory rate, muscle tongue, gag reflex, and skin color at 1 minute and at 5 minutes after birth
a score of 0, 1, or 2 for each trait, with a cumulative score below four are at risk for disabilities see page 264
17. Educational Placement 45 % spend more than 60 % of their time
outside of the general classroom
17 % spend 21 to 60 % of their time
outside of the general classroom
11 % spend less than 21 % of their time
outside of the general classroom
2 % are at home or in hospital
2 % are in residential facilities
23 % are in separate facility
18. Assuring Progress General Curriculum Possible for students to be successful in learning new skills academic and social
Partial participation by adapting skill sequence, providing person assistance, and technology
Peer tutoring has proven successful