398 research outputs found
Tape recording educational materials for secondary handicapped students
This is the publisher's version, also found at http://sped.org
Disability eligibility issues and university student assessment outcomes
This is the published version. Copyright 2001 IOS Press.Many issues pertaining to identifying and documenting university
students with learning disabilities (LD) have been discussed
in the professional literature or litigated. This article
documents the eligibility procedures and student assessment
results of a project for identifying and providing learning
strategies services to students with LD at a large midwestern
public university. Many legal issues are relevant in the discussion
and evaluation of this project, including the use of standardized
procedures for establishing disability status. This
project used standardized procedures such as eligibility rules
and cut-off scores for making eligibility decisions, thus reducing
the nagging inconsistencies and subjectivity associated
with nonstandardized assessments and clinical judgements
about LD. Students found eligible for the project showed academic
skill deficits as low as the fourth grade level, with the
average skill level being eighth grade. All students seeking
services but determined not eligible showed proficient academic
skills. Data from a sample of students not seeking
project services gave insight to the skills of “typical”, skill
proficient college students, thus providing an index by which
to judge skill deficiency
Strategy Mastery by At-Risk Students: Not a Simple Matter
This is the publisher's version, also found here: http://www.jstor.org/stable/1001966Teachers have succeeded in teaching at-risk students,
including those with learning disabilities,
to master and apply complex learning strategies.
The majority of this instruction has been provided
in resource rooms or other remedial settings
where intensive and systematic instruction
has been possible. Increasingly, teachers in regular
classrooms are being asked to provide learning
strategy instruction to diverse classes that
include students with disabilities. This expectation
presents many challenges to the classroom
teacher, including the creation of an instructional
balance between content and strategies instruction
while at the same time ensuring both the
interest and growth of all students in an academically
diverse class. In this article we review
the results of a line of programmatic research on
learning strategies instruction that has been conducted
on students with learning disabilities.
From this research, a set of instructional principles
about how to teach learning strategies to
at-risk students has emerged. These principles
and implications for teaching strategies to at-risk
students in regular classrooms are presented
Learning Strategies: An Instructional Alternative for Low-Achieving Adolescents
This is the publisher's version also found at http://sped.org/ABSTRACT: As mildly handicapped students move from elementary to secondary school, they
are expected to deal with increased curricular demands. The University of Kansas Institute for
Research in Learning Disabilities has designed and validated a set of task-specific learning
strategies as an instructional alternative for these students. Learning strategies teach students
"how to learn" so that they can more effectively cope with increased curriculum expectations
Analysis of Cognitive Abilities of Adolescents Learning Disabled Specifically in Arithmetic Computation
This research was published by the KU Center for Research on Learning, formerly known as the University of Kansas Institute for Research in Learning Disabilities.This investigation identified a group of adolescents homogeneously defined as specifically learning disabled in arithmetic and examined whether cognitive processes measured by visual-spatial, visual-reasoning, and visual-memory tasks are related to this task failure. The results indicate that a relationship exists between two major components in the LD definition --academic
task failure and specific cognitive abilities. There is validity to these two components when a very specific population of students disabled in arithmetic have been identified
Parental and Staff Expectations for the Future Achievement of Learning Disabled Students
This research was published by the KU Center for Research on Learning, formerly known as the University of Kansas Institute for Research in Learning Disabilities.The results of this study indicated that: (a) the difference between the expectations of mothers and fathers of LD youth was generally insignificant in most areas of achievement, (b) in most areas of achievement, school staff members' expectations were found to be insignificantly different from each other. (c) in most areas of achievement, school staff members' expectations were significantly lower for LD children than their parents, and (d) the child's birth order had a significant effect upon parental expectations for future achievement. Significant differences were found between parents in the areas of Total Achievement Potential and Social-Personal Adequacy. No significant differences were found in parental expectations in the Academic Adequacy and Economic Adequacy areas
Research Approaches to Studying the Link Between Learning Disabilities and Juvenile Delinquency
This research was published by the KU Center for Research on Learning, formerly known as the University of Kansas Institute for Research in Learning Disabilities.A relationship between learning disabilities and juvenile delinquency has been hypothesized for a period of time. Research on this relationship has been clouded with methodological difficulties. These problems include the definitions of learning disabilities and juvenile delinquency, the use of appropriate experimental designs, and the difficulty of obtaining informed consent in the court system. A current study through The University of Kansas Institute for Research in Learning Disabilities which is intervening with learning disabled youth in the juvenile court is described. Finally, key questions in the field are proposed with suggestion for future research
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