While perceptions of learning disabilities (LD) may vary according to country, culture, and teachers, it is often necessary to diagnose students in order to receive funding for services. It can be helpful to recognize those learning disabilities that students may have in order to provide extra assistance when necessary. It would be advantageous, too, if wide recognition of LD could take away the stigma that is often present. However, since LD is a multi-faceted topic, labeling often carries a negative connotation and can lead to ostracizing of students. It is beneficial for a student if the classification of a student with LD results in an enhanced educational experience.
According to New York State Part 200 Regulations, a learning disabilities is “a disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written, which manifests itself in an imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or to do mathematical calculations […]” (“Section 200.1 definitions:’, 2011). This definition is part of the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act of 2004, known as IDEA (A. Turnbull, R. Turnbull, and Wehmeyer, 2010) and is taken on by New York State in order to receive federal funding; it provides an overview of what is officially recognized as a learning disability. A learning disability can be evident when a student struggles with reception or expression of language, as well as difficulty with mathematics.
There are two methods employed by IDEA that are currently practiced to determine if a student has LD. Following the discrepancy model, schools can administer tests to determine a student’s intellectual ability and compare it with demonstra...
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...o fund those services, however, the schools have to comply with specific regulations set forth by the government. This process can take away the focus of the benefit for the student and put it on the results that the schools can produce. If it allows the student to take advantage of necessary assistance and enhances the learning experience, then the student is the main beneficiary of the classification.
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Section 200.1 definitions: Special education. (2011, September 7). Retrieved from
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Turnbull, A., Turnbull, R., & Wehmeyer, M.L. (2010). Exceptional lives: Special
Education in today’s schools. (Sixth ed.). Upper Saddle River: Merrill.
Graziano’s article over the handling of his son’s disability in the classroom also involves issues that relate to teachers detecting signs of mental illness in the classrooms, how teachers identify a behavioral troubled child, and training school counselors on the Section 504 policy that are all happening in the world today. Realizing these issues can help parents with giving their child the best out of their education and can also help teachers understand the importance of their relationship with students. Everyone should have the opportunity for a brighter future and having a learning disability should not be the end of the road for any student.
First, teachers are rarely prepared to handle the challenges of assessing students who have a learning disability coupled with limited English proficiency (Haung, Milczarski, Raby, 2011). Teachers usually have trouble distinguishing between a learning disorders and acquiring a second language. Eve...
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