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CO-MORBIDITY Learning, Disabilities, ADHD, Behavioral Emotional Disorders. Disorders of Behavior- Arriving at a Definition. Normal versus Disordered Behavior A social construct What constitutes good mental health? Concerns of frequency, intensity, duration
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CO-MORBIDITYLearning, Disabilities, ADHD, Behavioral Emotional Disorders
Disorders of Behavior- Arriving at a Definition • Normal versus Disordered Behavior • A social construct • What constitutes good mental health? • Concerns of frequency, intensity, duration • Difficult periods of childhood vs. behavior disorder • Lack of social skills vs. behavior disorder • Operationalizing such terms as pervasive, normal, • inappropriate, etc. • Student's emotionalproblems vs. ability to learn. Males- in the past- propensity to rules breaking • Behavior vs. Race and cultural bias • Girls- internalize emotional disturbance. • Other classifications
Physiological Birth defect TBI Tourette’s Syndrome Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, Depression Chemical and mood disorders. Environmental Learned behaviors Mental illness, etc. PTSS
Learning Disabled Students • interact awkwardly. • interact inappropriately in social situations. • socially imperceptive.
ATTENTION DEFICIT HYPERACTIVE DISORDER • tend to react to others aggressively • are generally rejected by peers • lose the opportunity to learn social skills • are isolated from most social situations • (Westby, Cutler, 1994). • victims of parents who are abusive or lacking effective parenting skills. • (Parker, Asher 1987).
Learning Disabilities:Typically a Disruptionin Maturational Delay • Language skills • Motor skills • Uneven performance on IQ assessment • Visual-Motor • Incomplete or mixed dominance • Social Immaturity • Genetics
At Risk for LD • Established risk: • identified through a medical diagnosis; • failure to develop, thrive; delayin language development. Unknown etiology is the important term. • Biological risk: • early medical and health history indicates increased probability for later atypical development. • (HIV, premature, injury at birth (anoxia, chemical dependency at birth.) • Environmental risk: • biologically sound • early life experience are characterized by a profound lack of stimulation- critical in the years birth to age five. Lack of cognitive stimulation in the formative years; lack of nutrition, age of mother, lack of prenatal and neonatal care. • Child can be at risk for all three, one or two.
Children with LD and Behavior Disorders • Short Attention Span • Low Frustration Tolerance • Insatiability- need a significant level of intensity, often bored, need new and novel activities, chronically restless, incredibly future oriented • Distractibility • Low self esteem
Continued: • Learned helplessness • Hyperactivity • Sequencing deficits • Memory deficits • Interrogoration • Disinhibition • Impulsivity
Common Elements in the DefinitionCommon Elements in the Definitions • Central Nervous System Dysfunction • Uneven Growth Pattern /Psychological Processing Deficits • Discrepancy Between Potential and Achievement • Exclusion of Other Causes
Symptoms of ADD/ADHD • Severity • Symptoms more frequent and severe than other children • Early onset • Symptoms must have appeared before age seven • Duration • Symptoms persist for at least 6 months
Subtypes of ADHD in DSM-IV • Primarily inattentive • Primarily • hyperactive and impulsive • Combined • ADHD-IA • ADHD-HI • ADHD-C
Implications of the Law • Children with ADD/ADHD may be eligible for special education services under the category of “other health impaired” • Children with ADD/ADHD may receive services under the legislation of Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 • ADD/ADHD is listed as a specific condition under “other health impaired”
Psychostimulant Medications for ADD/ADHD • 3-5 hours • 3-5 hours • Long-lasting • 8 hours • 8-12 • Ritalin • Dexedrine • Cylert • Adderall • Concerta
Precursors of Learning Disabilities-Difficulties in any of the following: • Communication/oral language • Phonological awareness • Rapid naming skills • Knowledge of the alphabet • Visual-motor skills • Fine- and gross-motor skills • Attending abilities • Social skills
Age Span of Learning Disabilities Population • Preschool children • Elementary-age children • Secondary students • Adults
Left-Right Brain Processing • Left Brain Right Brain • Analytical Synthesizes • Verbal Strengths Visual (spatial imagery • Linear Simultaneous • Sequential Holistic • “Sees” parts, pieces “Sees” whole, gestalt • Precise & accurate Makes sense of all the parts • Detail oriented Interpretation of non verbal cues • Step by step learner Organization • Ambiguity • Open ended questions
Nonverbal Learning Disabilities • Characteristics • Poor social perception • High verbal intelligence • Early reading achievement • More evident in adolescents and adults • Different than academic, language and cognitive disabilities • Asperger’s (?)Syndrome • Video
Indicators of Social Disabilities • Poor social perception • Lack of judgment • Lack of sensitivity to others • Difficulty making friends • Problems with family relations • Social problems in school • Undiagnosed Syndromes
Verbal Linguistic Learning Disabilities • Difficulties in Reading • Students may: • Have difficulty with one or more subject areas. • Have limited mastery of concepts. • Have limited fund of information. • Have limited expressive and receptive vocabulary. • Display limited knowledge of word • meanings. • Do not understand special multiple meanings of words. • Read significantly below level of text.
Content Area Reading • Technical Vocabulary- in the content areas carries the conceptual load. • Students may: • Have difficulty with one or more subject areas. • Have limited mastery of area concepts. • Do not understand technical words. • Do not understand special uses of non • technical words. • Display limited knowledge of word • meanings. • Read significantly below level of text.
Causes: • Weak listening speaking and sight vocabulary. • Weak contextual analysis skills. • Inability to apply same word in different contexts.
Wernicke's area Receptive language. Posterior reading system. Broca's area Expressive language Dyslexia and the Brain • There are three neural pathways for reading: • the parietal-temporal and frontal-(slower, analytical, used by beginning readers) • the occipital-temporal (word form, experienced readers).
Recent Brain ResearchSally Shaywitz, MD • At left, non-impaired readers activate neural systems that are mostly in the back of the left side of the brain (shaded areas); at right, dyslexic readers under activate these reading systems in the back of the brain and tend to over activate frontal areas. • In addition to their greater reliance on Broca's area, dyslexics are also using other auxiliary systems for reading, ones located on the right side as well as in the front of the brain. • This is evidenced by the activation of right hemisphere parts of the brain. (Dyslexics and slow readers often sub-vocalize. The physical aspect to their reading is an attempt to compensate for the disruption in the back of the brain.)
Difficulties in Mathematics • Sense of Body Image • Visual-motor & Visual Perceptual Abilities • Spatial Relations • Memory Abilities
Progressing from Concrete to Abstract • Concrete Level- Use Real Objects • Representational Level- Use Graphic Symbols • Abstract Level- Use Numbers
Information Processing Problems in Mathematics • Attention • Visual-spatial Processing • Auditory Processing • Memory & Retrieval • Motor Problems • Non Verbal LD