Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Understanding learning disability

I feel lucky that I didn't have any learning disabilities when I started schools, but I did study with learning disabled (LD) peers at elementary school. I still remember that one of my classmates was blamed and laughed at because of his distractibility and stammer when we were first graders. I could imagine how bad he would feel, and it must be hurt.

In the video How Difficult Can This Be, Richard Lavoie designed several activities to let teachers and parents know what happen to those learning disabled children. As he said, before thinking of the methods to improve these kids' performance, teachers and parents had better figure out what the problem ownership is. In some cases, teachers' attitudes and tones are forcing and aggressive, which makes students stressful, anxious and embarrassed in a long period of time. LD students really need time to process the information that they get from teachers. As a result, students would avoid the eye contact with teachers, and would not like to be volunteers to any questions. What's more, with the pressure and embarrassment, LD students have little time to solve problems and give right answers. What they always tend to respond is to say " I don't know". When there's one student saying so, the rest of students will probably stop trying to think about the answer, either.

LD students may have problems in visual perception, reading comprehension, oral expression, decoding and auditory or visual capabilities. For them, it is not because they don't try hard, or they are not motivated, but they lack the capability needed. Instead of forcing them to find the answer immediately, teachers should give enough instructions and directions based on different special needs. For instance, when LD students cannot comprehend the passage, teachers should provide them with background knowledge. When they have trouble following the listening material, scripts are better to be provided.

The part that they were talking about effect of perception on behavior impresses me the most. Richard asked Stephanie to share her opinion to an open-ended question. After she handed in her paper, he asked repeated questions that don't make sense at all, and finally tore her paper up in front of her. I feel shocked and sad about this situation. As Richard said, most LD students didn't know what they did wrong when they were yelled at and blamed. The teacher would rather satirize these student than let them realize the problem clearly (sometimes there's even no problems at all!). Teachers should not treat themselves as leaders, but guiders. Their love, patience and respect are essential when teaching LD students.

Kids are so sensitive that any reactions from teachers may encourage or frustrate them. Teachers should pay more attention to LD students in class. It is not because they are stupid, but they need more help. After watching this video, I get a deeply understanding and experience about learning disability. I can realize the suffering of LD students. It really enlightens me what I should do in my future career.



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