Development and Characteristics of Learners Overview of Disabilities PaTTAN Paraeducator Training Email Your Questions to: [email protected].

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Transcript Development and Characteristics of Learners Overview of Disabilities PaTTAN Paraeducator Training Email Your Questions to: [email protected].

Development and
Characteristics
of Learners
Overview of Disabilities
PaTTAN Paraeducator
Training
1
Email Your Questions to:
[email protected]
2
Technical Difficulties:
Call the V Span Trouble Number:
800-628-0833
3
Paraeducator Development Plan Menu
(to be used in conjunction with Paraeducator’s Personal Development Plan)
Directions: This menu is a tool for you to use as you progress through the Paraeducator Course. Whenever you come
across topics about which you would like more information, place a checkmark next to the topic and indicate in the Notes
column any specifics (for example, in #1 indicate which disability). For each topic checked make an entry in the
Paraeducator Personal Development Plan.
Topics
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1. Characteristics of the Disability
2. Instructional Strategies
3. Lifting
4. Feeding (food issues)
5. Toileting
6. Assistive Technology and Adaptive Equipment
7. Orientation and Mobility
8. Transportation
9. Sign Language
10. Behavioral Strategies
11. Data Collection
12. Job Coaching
13. Restraint Techniques
14.
Confidentiality
15. Socialization Issues
16. Communication Issues
17. Safety Issues
18. Sensory Impairment
19.
Early Intervention
20. How to be a “Shadow” in a Child Care Center
21. Basic Educational Terminology
22. Other
23.
24.
25.
Notes
Paraeducator Development Plan
What topics do I
need to know
more about for my
job?
Where can I get the
information/training?
What action steps
When will I
am I going to take? complete this?
5
Local Policy
Your local district’s policies regarding
paraeducator job descriptions, duties,
and responsibilities provide the final
word!
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Agenda
 Characteristics of student development
 Identify thirteen (13) disability categories
as listed in IDEA
 Characteristics of the disability
 Issues related to the disability
 Discuss Paraeducator’s role in supporting
students with disabilities
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Learner Outcomes
Participants will be able to:
 Recognize importance of student development
 Identify thirteen disability categories
 List characteristics of the disability
 Discuss issues related to the disability
 Describe the paraeducator’s role in supporting
students with disabilities
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Student Support Activity
Look at handout #1
Describe this student
Physical development
Social/emotional skills
including behavior
Cognitive and communication
abilities
Daily living skills
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Developmental Expectations
Children learn naturally
All students grow at their
own developmental pace.
Some students can
experience delays in their
development
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To teach effectively,
educators must always keep in mind the
dynamics and needs of the group of
students as well as the individual
characteristics and needs of each
student in the group…
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How Children Develop
and Learn
Adults must know what
students are like
developmentally as well
as what makes each
student unique.
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How Children Develop
and Learn
Child development is the accepted body
of knowledge about how students grow
and learn.
13
How Children Develop
and Learn
There are five areas of development that,
together, give us a picture of the whole student:
physical, social/emotional, self help, cognitive,
and speech and language.
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The Five Primary
Developmental Areas
Physical development –
the ability to move, see, and hear
Language and speech development the ability to talk, express needs
Social and emotional development –
the ability to relate to others
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The Five Primary
Developmental Areas
Self help
(or adaptive development)
-the ability to eat, dress, and
take care of themselves
Cognitive development
-the ability to think and learn
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How Children Develop
and Learn
These developmental
areas are interrelated –
development in one
area affects other
areas.
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How Children Develop
and Learn
Understanding the stages of
development gives adults
knowledge of what students
will be like, how they may
react to and use the materials
adults select, and how they
will relate to others.
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How Children Develop
and Learn
All students bring to school a set of unique
characteristics and experiences that affect
how they respond to school experiences,
relate to others, and learn.
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How Children Develop
and Learn
Effective teachers and
other adults get to know
each student in order to
individualize teaching and
learning
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Students with Special Needs
Ultimately the goal for students with
disabilities is the same as for students
without disabilities: to access the curriculum
and maximize their potential. This is what
meeting individual needs is all about !
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Child Development and Disabilities
Child development
affects the disability
The disability
affects student
development
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Student Support Activity
Look at handout #1
Describe the skills and
abilities of the student.
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Introduction to Disability Categories
Need to identify the disability:
 For eligibility
 To better match related services to student
needs
 Match individual development levels with
appropriate support
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Thirteen disability categories
as listed in IDEA
Autism
Deaf-blindness
Deafness
Hearing impairment
Emotional disturbance
Mental retardation
Multiple disabilities
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Thirteen disability categories
as listed in IDEA
Orthopedic impairment
Other health impairment
Specific learning disability
Speech/language impairment
Traumatic brain injury
Visual impairment
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Disability Categories:
Autism
Autism is a developmental
disorder significantly affecting
verbal and nonverbal
communication. Students with
this disability have difficulties
with communication, behavior,
and social skills.
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Characteristics of Autism
Unusual responses to sounds
 Difficulties in understanding speech
 Difficulties when talking
 Poor pronunciation and voice control
 Problems understanding things that are
seen
 Problems in understanding gestures
 The senses of touch, taste, and smell

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Characteristics of Autism
Clumsiness in skilled movements
 Aloofness and social withdrawal
 Resistance to change
 Socially embarrassing behavior
 Special fears
 Inability to play
 Special skills

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Disability Categories:
Autism
What might you do?
provide structure in routine and
classroom environment
prepare students for changes in
routine
use very concrete language
make language visual
observe activities and choices
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Disability Categories:
Deaf-Blindness
Deaf-blindness is the combination of a
visual impairment and a hearing loss.
Educational approaches to address
one of these problems may not be the
best way to help a student learn.
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Characteristics of
Deaf-Blindness
Visual impairment + hearing loss
Access to information is limited by
sensory abilities
Additional time, direct experience, and
repetition to receive, process, and
respond to interaction and
information needed
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Characteristics of DeafBlindness
Teaching through touch
helps students with
extensive sensory loss
Hand-under-hand is an
essential instructional
strategy
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Disability Categories:
Deaf-Blindness
What might you do?
Maximize the use of vision and
hearing
Learn successful procedures for
“greeting” each student
Help students orient themselves
to classroom, bathroom, cafeteria,
etc.
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Disability Categories:
Deafness
Deafness is a hearing
loss so severe that the
student cannot get
information through
the sense of hearing,
even with the use of
amplification.
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Characteristics of Deafness
May exhibit unintelligible or no speech
Possible speech and/or language
delays
Usually use hearing aids
May use assistive listening devices
May use sign language
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Disability Categories:
Deafness
What might you do?
Help the student learn to
operate their listening device
Meet with interpreter to share
homework, vocabulary
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Disability Categories:
Deafness
What might you do?
Look at environment for best
seating
Work with others to follow good
communication behavior
Facilitate student learning
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Disability Categories:
Hearing Impairment
Hearing impairment means an
impairment in hearing, whether
permanent or fluctuating, that
adversely affects a child’s
educational performance. It is not as
severe as deafness.
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Characteristics of Hearing
Impairment
•May exhibit unintelligible or no
speech
•Possible speech and/or language
delays
•Usually use hearing aids
•May use assistive listening devices
•May use sign language
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Disability Categories:
Hearing Impairment
What might you do?
Optimize learning environment
Organize their instructional
materials
Communicate clearly
Promote self-advocacy
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Activity
Look at Handout #3
Consider the disabilities that we have
just discussed: autism, deaf-blind,
deafness, and hearing impairment.
Answer the three questions on the
handout relating to these disability
categories.
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Disability Categories:
Emotional Disturbance
A condition exhibiting one or more of
the following characteristics which
occur over a period of time, and to a
marked degree, which affect a child’s
ability to learn:
inability to learn which cannot be
explained by intellectual, sensory or
health factors
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Disability Categories:
Emotional Disturbance
inability to build or maintain
satisfactory interpersonal
relationships with peers and teachers
inappropriate types of behavior or
feelings under normal circumstances
45
Disability Categories:
Emotional Disturbance
a general pervasive
mood of unhappiness
or depression
a tendency to develop
physical symptoms or
fears associated with
personal or school
problems
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Characteristics of Emotional
Disturbance
Hyperactivity (short attention span,
impulsiveness)
Aggression/self-injurious behavior
(acting out, fighting)
Withdrawal (failure to initiate;
retreat)
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Characteristics of Emotional
Disturbance
Immaturity (inappropriate crying,
temper tantrums, poor coping skills)
Learning difficulties (academically
performing below grade level)
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Characteristics of Emotional
Disturbance
Students with the most serious
emotional disturbances may exhibit:
distorted thinking
excessive anxiety,
bizarre motor acts
 abnormal mood swings
Some are identified as students who
have a severe psychosis or
schizophrenia.
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Disability Categories:
Emotional Disturbance
What might you do?
Keep rules short
Check for understanding
Provide verbal cues to students to
remind them to prepare for
changing classes or going home
Give written cues such as
schedules or To Do lists
Remain patient
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Disability Categories:
Mental Retardation
Students with this disability have
impaired mental development which
adversely affects their educational
performance, and who exhibit
impaired adaptive behavior in
learning, maturation, or social
development.
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Characteristics of Mental
Retardation
Students with mental retardation may:
sit up, crawl, or walk later than other
students
learn to talk later, or have trouble
speaking
find it hard to remember things
not understand how to pay for things
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Characteristics of Mental
Retardation
have trouble understanding social
rules,
have trouble seeing the
consequences of their actions,
have trouble solving problems,
have trouble thinking logically.
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Disability Categories:
Mental Retardation
What might you do?
Make instruction and practice more
concrete and personally relevant
by relating them to tasks and
experiences the student
understands
Provide additional practice on
skills
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Disability Categories:
Mental Retardation
What might you do?
Provide social skill instruction
Repeat instructions or activity
descriptions;
 Keep directions simple
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Disability Categories:
Multiple Disabilities
Students with multiple disabilities
is a student who has several
disabilities together (such as
mental retardation, along with
blindness or orthopedic problems)
that cause a need for many
educational services.
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Characteristics of
Multiple Disabilities
Students with severe or multiple
disabilities may exhibit a wide range
of characteristics, depending on the
combination and severity of
disabilities, and the person’s age.
There are, however, some traits they
may share, including:
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Characteristics of Multiple
Disabilities
Limited speech or communication;
Difficulty in basic physical mobility;
Tendency to forget skills through
disuse;
Trouble generalizing skills from one
situation to another; and/or
A need for support in major life
activities (e.g., domestic, leisure,
community use, vocational).
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Disability Categories:
Multiple Disabilities
What might you do?
Provide physical support in daily
activities such as dressing, feeding,
toileting
Learn positioning techniques
Use safe lifting techniques
Ask for training in specialized areas
if you need it (tube feeding, seizures)
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Disability Categories:
Orthopedic Impairment
Student with this disability have
skeletal problems which may be
first seen at birth (e.g., clubfoot,
cerebral palsy), may be the result
of disease (e.g., polio), or may be
the result of an accident (e.g.,
amputation).
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Characteristics of
Orthopedic Impairment
Stiffness
Instability
Weakness
Pain
Swelling
commonly in
the back and
neck, hip and
pelvis,
shoulder, and
other areas
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Disability Categories:
Orthopedic Impairment
What might you do?
Learn to accommodate the
classroom environment
Use assistive devices for writing
skills and communication
Consider inclusion issues
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Disability Categories:
Other Health Impairment
Students with this disability
have limited or heightened
sensitivities to their
environment, or limited
strength or endurance caused
by health problems like
asthma, diabetes, or epilepsy.
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Characteristics of Other Health
Impairment
Unexplained tiredness
Unusual moodiness
Agitation
Weakness
Pale coloration
Breathing problems
Seizures
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Disability Categories:
Other Health Impairment
What might you do?
Be sure you know which of your
students has which health
problem
Get clear direction on what you
need to do in an emergency
Monitor safety and health
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Activity
Look at Handout #3 again
Consider the disabilities that we have
just discussed: emotional
disturbance, mental retardation,
multiple disabilities, orthopedic
impairment, and other health
impairment.
Answer the three questions on the
handout relating to these disability
categories.
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Disability Categories:
Specific Learning Disability
Learning disability is a general term
that describes specific kinds of
learning problems. A learning
disability can cause a person to have
trouble learning and using certain
skills. The skills most often affected
are: reading, writing, listening,
speaking, reasoning, and doing math.
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Characteristics of Specific
Learning Disability
Students may have difficulty:
Taking in, remembering, and
producing information
Understanding, connecting and
relating new information
Planning, organizational, study and
problem-solving skills
Social skills and self-esteem
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Disability Categories:
Specific Learning Disability
What might you do?
Adapt the physical
environment
Provide organizational
changes in areas such as
time, instructional
methods, or materials
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Disability Categories:
Specific Learning Disability
• What might you do?
Use advance organizers (outlines,
study guides, focus questions) to
structure classroom
Allow more time for assignments,
projects
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Disability Categories:
Speech/Language Impairment
This is a disability that
affects communication such
as stuttering or not being able
to make certain vocal sounds.
It may also be a language
delay or voice impairment.
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Characteristics of
Speech/Language Impairment
Speech Disorders:
interruption in flow or rhythm of
speech
problems with the way sounds
are formed
difficulties with the pitch,
volume, or quality of the voice
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Characteristics of
Speech/Language Impairment
Language Disorders:
improper use of words and their
meanings
inability to express ideas
inappropriate grammatical patterns
reduced vocabulary
inability to follow directions
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Disability Categories:
Speech/language
Impairment
What might you do?
Prepare the class
Adapt the physical environment
Provide many opportunities for
student to interact verbally
With student who stutters, use
nonverbal listening skills
74
Disability Categories:
Traumatic Brain Injury
A traumatic brain injury (TBI) is an
injury to the brain caused by the
head being hit by something or
shaken violently. This injury can
change how a person acts, moves,
and thinks. A traumatic brain injury
can also change how a student
learns and acts in school
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Characteristics of Traumatic
Brain Injury
Students with TBI may have one or
more difficulties, including:
Physical disabilities
Sensory issues
Headaches
Fatigue
Seizures
Paralysis
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Characteristics of Traumatic
Brain Injury
Difficulties with thinking
Short and long term memory
Concentration
Social, behavioral, or emotional
problems
Mood, emotional Changes
Relating to others
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Disability Categories:
Traumatic Brain Injury
What might you do?
Provide a structured environment
Shorten homework assignments
Use lots of drill and practice
Break instruction into smaller
amounts of time
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Disability Categories:
Traumatic Brain Injury
What might you do?
Allow student to keep extra set of
books at home
Be clear on classroom rules &
expectations …repeat them often
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Disability Categories:
Visual Impairment
Students with this disability are blind
or have low vision.
The terms partially sighted, low
vision, legally blind, and totally blind
are used in the educational context to
describe students with visual
impairments.
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Characteristics of
Visual Impairment
Students with Visual Impairment:
have little reason to explore
environment, missing opportunities
to learn
Are unable to imitate social behavior
Do not understand nonverbal cues
May have obstacles to independence
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Disability Categories:
Visual Impairment
What might you do?
Use concrete materials and tactile
aids like relief maps, math
manipulatives, and raised-line
paper for writing
Encourage hands-on learning
Help students “see”, e.g.
incidental learning
82
Disability Categories:
Visual Impairment
What might you do?
Produce modified
materials on a copier,
computer or produce
braille
Expect the student to
actively participate and
be engaged
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Activity
Look at Handout #3 one more time
Consider the disabilities that we have
just discussed: specific learning
disability, speech/language
impairment, traumatic brain injury,
and visual impairment.
Answer the three questions on the
handout relating to these disability
categories.
84
Student Support Activity
Look at your Student Support
Activity Handout #1
Using your notes from
Handout #3 complete the
section on ideas for
supporting your student.
85
What have we talked about?
The importance of student development
Thirteen disability categories
Characteristics of the disability
Issues related to the disability
The Paraeducator’s role in supporting
students with disabilities
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Wrap Up
Please complete the evaluation form
for today’s session.
Using the Paraeducator
Development Plan Menu and Action
Plan, incorporate the topics covered
tonight into your plan.
Sign out
PaTTAN Website – www.pattan.net
87
Afterschool
Videoconferences:
February 12, 2008– Standard #3
“Individual Learning Differences”
March 18, 2008– Standard #4
“ Instructional Strategies”
April 22, 2008– Standard #5
“Learning Environments and
Social Interactions”
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