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eLearning Series: Learning Disabilities
The Bottom Line On Learning Disabilities
( 50 articles in this series )
A
Difficulty Processing Info
May Lead to a Learning Disability
Information processing is how one’s body collects
information from sight, smell, touch, hearing, and taste. The
brain is supposed to collect the information the body is sending,
recognize it and respond to it appropriately. This information
is usually stored, as well, so the brain will recognize what
to do quicker when it happens again. It is the brain’s processing
that makes it possible for people to do all the things they
can do in a lifetime and even a day. The two main types
of information processing are vision and hearing. They have several
overlapping subcategories but accomplish the same goal, giving
the person the ability to process a situation or circumstance.
The most important ones are visual and auditory discrimination,
memory, and sequencing, and visual motor processing, visual
closure, and special relationships.
Information
processing disorders are a deficiency of the brain in processing
and understanding the information the senses
have gathered. This is not related to a physical problem with
the eye and ears or an intellectual disorder. It is the brain
that cannot function and process the information properly.
Learning disabilities will and do arise in such people with
no known cause or reason. Many times it can take years to figure
out that a person has an information processing disorder. This
is after every test conceivable has been performed. Those suffering
from this type of disorder tend to be very frustrated, have
low self-esteem, and be socially withdrawn from others. This
is especially true if there are speech problems that are apparent
to those around them. If you or your child has a consistent
difficulty with learning or behavior over a long period of
time, you might want to be or have them looked at by a doctor.
Some basics you should know about visual processing disorders
is that they effect how the brain processes what the
eyes see. This has nothing to do with actual vision and there is not
any underlying impairment. This is a life long challenge for
many and effects how the person interprets information. Their
behavior will change after difficulties have risen to the point
of absolute frustration. There are several types of visual
processing disorders that can effect what one perceives and
can cause many learning issues. They can cause different problems
at different ages. This is due to the capacity of the person
being able to express them selves and know what is happening
to them.
During
early childhood, the most common difficulties
may be interpreted as just simple childhood issues. These
children
are often easily distracted and find visual stimulation very
hard to understand. They might get simple symbols like &,
+, /, and x confused, or just totally misunderstand them. The
alignment of math problems and writing within margins or on
lines seem to pose a problem, as well. Children with visual
disabilities also tend to bump into things due to the inability
to judge distances. They tend to also have an issue with similar
numbers or colors, as well. It is important to use books and
other material with large print and also read directions out
loud. Teaching methods must include many forms of understanding
such as images, sounds, and written and spoken words. This
allows the child to see it and process it from several senses
not just visual.
For teens and adults with visual disabilities, the
most common difficulty is putting multiple sources of information
together
to form one document. They tend to have problems identifying
things from pictures, maps, charts and graphs. Some very simple
chores, such as finding a phone number in the telephone book,
can prove to be an impossible task. Or, even remembering the
directions to a specific location can be almost impossible.
There are also many common issues for those suffering from
an auditory processing disorder. Many of the disorders
have nothing to do with actual hearing loss. The ear hears what
is said, but the brain cannot process the information properly.
Many of the difficulties are the same for those with ADD and
may be hereditary. Many of the people suffering from auditory
disabilities find socializing extremely difficult. For children
just the simple tasks of learning to talk and understanding
what people say to them can be a challenge. They might have
problems discerning between background noise and the meaningful
sound they were supposed to hear. Staying focused on a person’s
voice or remembering a song they heard can prove very hard
if not impossible at times. It is also common for them to mix
up words that sound alike. Sufferers can find simple tasks
as speaking in a normal tone or remembering people’s names
very hard and feel socially inept. The most important thing
about these types of disorders is to help make the sufferers
life easier through accommodation so they can function to their
best ability in society.
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by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2006
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