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eLearning Series: Learning Disabilities
The Bottom Line On Learning Disabilities
( 50 articles in this series )
Learning
Intelligence with a Learning Disability
Learning is supposed to be what we do best.
As children, we are like sponges that soak up everything around
us. This is not always the case. For some people, learning
is not easy and simple concepts and ideas can be dumbfounding
at times. For those individuals who have a learning
disability, intelligence is there but the capacity to use the
information
or process it is not. Many people with learning disabilities
make learning into an art form. They spend so much of their
lives struggling to understand and keep up with others that
they take learning and the capacity to learn to a whole new
level. Learning intelligence is how one goes about the learning
process and gathering and retaining information.
For most people with LD, it is a frustrating journey of hit
and misses on what will help them and what will not. As more
and more time goes by and help is given, the learning disabled
person will excel in the art of learning. Where the average
person will know basic ways to help them retain and learn information,
the learning disabled must know many different ways to accomplish
what works best for them at any given moment. Most
people with LD are extremely intelligent. It is there lack of being able
to express what is going on in their minds that stumps them.
There is more than just one kind of intelligence. The theory
of multiple intelligences has been around for decades now.
The idea that IQ tests that only measure two forms of intelligence
is a good way to gage the IQ of a child or adult has been proven
not necessarily so. It has been proposed that there are eight
types of intelligence and depending on which type you are dominated
by that will be your learning style.
There are those who are word smart and excel at linguistic
intelligence. This would be the way a child or adult with a
nonverbal learning disorder would be most apt to learn. With
verbal cues and communication for all the things they need
to know the LD person can live up to their fullest potential.
Those who are number and reasoning smart surpass in logical-mathematical
intelligence. These people find working with numbers easy.
They learn by putting everything into an equation and logically
solving it. For those who are picture smart such as a child
or adult with a verbal learning disorder. They would learn
best by using their spatial intelligence. For those gifted
in movement and sports bodily-kinesthetic intelligence is the
forte. There are those who extraordinarily musically talented
and have a gift in musical intelligence. The self-smart individuals,
such as those with Asperger Syndrome, know a great deal about
them selves and what interests them, they excel at intrapersonal
intelligence. There are also those who are people smart and
thrive on interpersonal intelligence. The last type of intelligence
is naturalist intelligence or nature smart.
Most school systems only focus on linguistic
and logical-mathematical intelligence. This does nothing for the other people who fall
into the learning intelligence of the other six possibilities.
Children with a LD may not be as learning disabled as people
might think. It could easily mean the style of teaching is
wrong for their style of learning. Because of the higher recognition
of more than one type of learning intelligence, more and more
classrooms are integrating a variety of methods. This has lead
to more students being kept in the traditional classroom and
less labeled as learning disabled. For the schools that have
adjusted their curriculum to include a variety of teaching
methods that serve all students and keep them interested in
learning. These schools have seen an increase in test scores
and less labeling and need for special services. For those
schools that are determined that the only way to teach is old
way. They spend hundreds of thousands of dollars in special
educational programs and services each year. There scoring
on tests is low and the children seem to have a harder time
staying focused. Using all eight methods of learning in the
classroom as well as at home can truly help the learning disabled
child tremendously. There will be less need for intrusive intervention
that social separates these kids from their peers. The learning
disabled child will be able participate in the classroom and
learn like all the other kids, happy and struggle free.
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by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2006
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