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Understand how Traumatic Brain Injuries (TBIs) can impact students' cognitive, motor, and sensory abilities, and learn effective school interventions to support their learning and well-being. Get insights on assessments, memory strategies, processing speed, and more.
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Traumatic Brain Injury and School Intervention Thomas B. King, M. Ed. Hospital Education Program VCU Health Care System
Epidemiology of TBI • 1 million people are treated and released for TBI • 230,000 people are hospitalized and survive • 50,000 people die each year Center for Neurological Skills
Centers for Disease Controlestimates that…. • Each year more than 80,000 Americans survive a hospitalization for TBI and are discharged with TBI-related disabilities • 5.3 million Americans are living today with a TBI-related Injury
Types of TBI Impairments • Cognitive (such as memory loss, concentration deficit, judgment impairment and mood disorders • Movement abilities (such as strength, coordination and balance) • Sensation (such as vision impairment and tactile sensation loss) • Seizure disorders
Overview of TBI – Mild TBI • Brief loss of consciousness • Loss of memory immediately before or after the injury • May seem fine on the surface, but continues to experience on-going functional problems (this is sometimes called post concussion syndrome) • This causes change in personality • Change in cognitive functioning
Glasgow Coma Scale • Used for initial assessment • Scaled scores for observed responses • Eye opening • Motor responses • Verbal responses
Range of GCS scores • Severe TBI 1 to 8 • Moderate TBI 9 to 12 • Mild TBI 13 to 15
Definition of TBI • Any period of loss of consciousness • Any loss of memory for the events just before or after the incident • Any alteration in mental state at the time of the accident • Focal neurological deficits, which may or may not be transient American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine
Range of sequella • Mild TBI can cause “soft” neurological difficulties, change in personality and/or mood. School performance may be affected. • Moderate TBI may adversely affect overall IQ and will more than likely have an impact on school performance • Severe TBI will adversely affect a range of life activities
Coup and contra coup • The coup contusions occur at the area of direct initial impact • The Contra coup injury occurs at the opposite side of the brain
School intervention • IDEA has TBI as a separate classification for services • Youngsters may also qualify for services in a number of other categories depending on the type and range of injuries • Remember – TBI is not the same thing as Specific Learning Disabilities—there may be similarities, but they are not the same, and the diagnostic criteria is different
InterventionAt the return to school • Obtain as much information about the youngster’s condition as possible • Changes in motor function • Changes in cognitive function • Changes in personality or emotional function
Understanding Assessments • Hospital and Clinical Assessments address the specifics of focal injury • School assessments are typically geared toward regulatory mandates • Both assessments are important
Harvesting needed information • The child will qualify for special services if he/she has had a closed head trauma and • There is an identified change in performance to the extent that help is needed
Neuropsychological or psychoeducational assessment • IQ score • Visual-motor • Visual processing • Auditory processing • Non-verbal intelligence • Processing speed or perceptual speed • Language processing
Academic achievement assessment • Material that was introduced just prior to the time of the injury • Material that was assumed to have been previously mastered. • Look for “splinter” skills in the assessment data
Using the assessment information Once the assessment is completed, it is important to use it correctly
Suggested interventions strategies for memory • The student may very well remember previously mastered material, but may encounter problems learning new material • Get frequent feedback from the student • Have the student repeat information • Never introduce more than can be mastered in a session • “Spiraling” technique may be needed
Memory intervention techniques • Mind mapping or semantic mapping techniques may be helpful • Mnemonic devices should be considered • There are books that catalog mnemonic devices and the teacher(s) should have access to them • Keep intervention strategies simple and consistent
Processing Speed • Allow extra time • Allow for fewer examples • Allow dictation • Be very careful to monitor reading comprehension—your student may appear to read as before, but their comprehension may suffer due to lowered speed of reading
Visual-motor • Limit and monitor far point copying • Limit and monitor “matching” style tests that cross the midline • Do not penalize letter formation errors or use of space • OT intervention may be important • Providing notes or having a note buddy may be important
Non-verbal intelligence • Changes in this area can be due to an injury to the parietal lobes • Math and math abstraction may suffer • Use of manipulative materials for math instruction may become important • Monitor changes in socialization skills
Auditory processing • Speech pathology may be important for changes in language processing • Use of spell check devices may be important • Have the student repeat instructions if necessary • Remember auditory processing is not the same thing as auditory acuity
Visual processing • Map skills may change • Use of graphs and charts in instruction may require verbal mediation • Copying may be inaccurate • Providing notes may be important • Remember – visual processing is not the same as visual acuity
And finally • Changes in your student may be dramatic, but also subtle • Subtle changes can, over time, cause serious academic difficulties • Do not assume that subtle changes will go away – more than likely –they won’t