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PRESENTATION BY GULRUKH
Learning Disability 
 Definition: 
 "Specific learning disability" is defined as follows by IDEA: 
 The term "specific learning disability" means a disorder in one or more of the basic 
psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written, 
which disorder may manifest itself in the imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, 
spell, or do mathematical calculations. 
 Disorders included. Such term includes such conditions as perceptual disabilities, brain 
injury, minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and developmental aphasia. 
 Disorders not included. Such term does not include a learning problem that is primarily the 
result of visual, hearing, or motor disabilities, of mental retardation, of emotional 
disturbance, or of environmental, cultural, or economic disadvantage.
Components from 6 different 
Definitions: 
 By their nature are heterogeneous disorders. 
 Represent specific types of under achievement (i.e. a person demonstrates appreciably less 
ability in some skills than in others) 
 Are probably the result of some central nervous system (CNS) dys-funtion. 
 Involve some form of psychological process (i.e. Intrinsic) disorder 
 Can be manifested in academic disorders 
 Can be manifested in spoken language disorders. 
 Don’t result from other conditions such as mental retardation, behaviour disorders, and so 
forth 
 Can be manifested in thinking disorders. (derailment, poverty of 
speech, tangentially, illogicality, perseveration, neologism)
TYPES OF LEARNING DISORDERS: 
Dyslexia 315.00(F81.0) 
a language-based disability in 
which a person has trouble 
understanding written words. It may 
also be referred to as reading 
disability or reading disorder. 
Dyscalculia 
315.1(FB1.2) 
a mathematical disability in 
which a person has a difficult 
time solving arithmetic problems 
and grasping math concepts. 
Dysgraphia 315.2(F81. 
81) 
a writing disability in which a 
person finds it hard to form letters 
or write within a defined space.
TYPES OF LEARNING DISORDERS 
disabilities in which a person has 
difficulty understanding 
language despite normal 
hearing and vision. 
a neurological disorder which 
originates in the right hemisphere 
of the brain, causing problems 
with visual-spatial, intuitive, 
organizational, evaluative and 
holistic processing functions.
DYSLEXIA: 
 Dyslexia is the name for specific learning disabilities in reading. 
 Dyslexia is often characterized by difficulties with accurate word recognition, 
decoding and spelling. 
 Dyslexia may cause problems with reading comprehension and slow down 
vocabulary growth. 
 Dyslexia may result in poor reading fluency and reading out loud. 
 Dyslexia is neurological and often genetic. 
 Dyslexia is not the result of poor instruction. 
 With the proper support, almost all people with dyslexia can become good readers 
and writers.
SIGNS & SYMPTOMS 
 The Dyslexia Research Trust6 includes these as the most common signs and symptoms 
associated with dyslexia: 
 Learning to read - the child, despite having normal intelligence and receiving proper teaching 
and parental support, has difficulty learning to read. 
 Milestones reached later - the child learns to crawl, walk, talk, throw or catch things, ride a 
bicycle later than the majority of other kids. 
 Speech - apart from being slow to learn to speak, the child commonly mispronounces words, 
finds rhyming extremely challenging, and does not appear to distinguish between different 
word sounds. 
 Slow at learning sets of data - at school the child takes much longer than the other children to 
learn the letters of the alphabet and how they are pronounced. There may also be problems 
remembering the days of the week, months of the year, colors, and some arithmetic tables.
SIGNS & SYMPTOMS 
 Coordination - the child may seem clumsier than his or her peers. Catching a ball 
may be difficult. 
 Left and right - the child commonly gets "left" and "right" mixed up. 
 Reversal - numbers and letters may be reversed without realizing. 
 Spelling - may not follow a pattern of progression seen in other children. The child 
may learn how to spell a word today, and completely forget the next day. One 
word may be spelt in a variety of ways on the same page. 
 Phonology problems - phonology refers to the speech sounds in a language. If a 
word has more than two syllables, phonology processing becomes much more 
difficult. For example, with the word "unfortunately" a person with dyslexia may be 
able to process the sounds "un" and "ly", but not the ones in between.
SIGNS & SYMPTOMS 
 Concentration span - children with dyslexia commonly find it hard to 
concentrate for long, compared to other children. Many adults with dyslexia 
say this is because after a few minutes of non-stop struggling, the child is 
mentally exhausted. A higher number of children with dyslexia also 
have ADHD (attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder), compared to the rest of 
the population. 
 Sequencing ideas - when a person with dyslexia expresses a sequence of 
ideas, they may seem illogical for people without the condition. 
 Autoimmune conditions - people with dyslexia are more likely to develop 
immunological problems, such as hay fever, asthma, eczema, and other 
allergies.
Types of Dyslexia: 
 The types are identified by the nature of the problem within the central nervous system /brain. 
 Trauma Dyslexia 
 Usually occurs after some form of brain trauma or injury to the area of the brain that controls 
reading and writing. It is a permanent brain injury rarely seen in today's school-age population 
because it results from severe head injuries. 
 Primary dyslexia 
 It’s a dysfunction of, rather than damage to, the left side of the brain (cerebral cortex) and 
does not change with age. Individuals with this type of dyslexia are rarely able to read above 
a fourth-grade level and may struggle with reading, spelling, and writing as adults. Primary 
dyslexia is passed in family lines through their genes (hereditary). It is found more often in boys 
than in girls. 
 Secondary/developmental 
 Type of dyslexia is felt to be caused by hormonal development or malnutrition during the early 
stages of fetal development. Poor parenting, abuse, neglect, and/or poor nutrition during the 
developmental years 0 to 5 are also known causes. Developmental dyslexia diminishes as the 
child matures. It is also more common in boys.
Dyslexics & Milestones
Treatment:
Integrative Approach:
Learning Disabilities Diagnostic Inventory- LDDI 
 Description 
 The learning disabilities diagnostic inventory (LDDI) is an assessment device composed of 
items taken from the research and theoretical literature on specific learning disabilities 
(LD) especially as it pertains to the neuropsychological aspects. The items represent 
specific observable behaviours associated with LD in listening, speaking reading writing 
mathematics and reasoning. 
 Consists of: 
 six independent scales, each with 15 easy-to-rate items. 
 Stanines are used to identify the likelihood of intrinsic processing disorders in the six 
areas—Listening, Speaking, Reading, Writing, Mathematics, Reasoning 
 also to conduct a profile analysis to determine the extent to which a student’s LDDI profile 
reflects that which is associated with learning disabilities.
Learning Disabilities Diagnostic Inventory 
 AGE RANGE: 
 Identify learning disabilities in children ages 8 to 17. 
 TIME PERIOD: 
 The LDDI can be completed in 10 minutes by a teacher or speech-language pathologist who is 
familiar with the student’s skills. 
 Scales & Forms 
 Listening 
 Speaking 
 Reading 
 Writing 
 Mathematics 
 Reasoning
Worksheet:
LDDI SCORING 
RAW SCORES 
 Total number of points rated 
for each scale. 
 Don’t tell anything in 
particular, just help in finding 
out stanines. 
STANINES 
 Stanines are converted from 
raw scores using the tables in 
the appendix. 
 Standard scores with a mean 
of 5 and a standard deviation 
of 1.96) and percentiles 
 Identify the likelihood of 
intrinsic processing disorders in 
the six areas assessed by the 
lddi. 
 Conduct a profile analysis to 
determine the extent to which 
a student’s LDDI profile reflects 
which is associated with 
learning difficulties. 
PERCENTILES 
 Percentile ranks represent 
values that indicate the 
percentage of the distribution 
of a representative sample of 
individuals of the same age 
group
Psychometrics of the Test: 
 Reliability 
Internal consistency reliability coefficients exceed .90 for all scales. evidence for 
stability and inter-scorer reliability is also provided and coefficients are in the .80s 
and .90s. 
 Thus, the LDDI can be used with confidence to yield consistent results. 
 Validity 
These studies involved extensive item selection and differentiation examinations, 
which included confirmatory factor analysis; as well as studies that examined the 
lddi’s relationship to age, academic achievement, group differentiation, gender, 
and ethnicity-all of which support the validity of the lddi scores. Factor analysis 
research also validated the lddi’s factor structure. These studies all provide 
evidence that the LDDI yields valid results that can be used with confidence to 
identify the presence or absence of learning difficulties in children and 
adolescents.
Controlling for Test Bias 
 The LDDI was built to minimise the effects of bias 
 First, the effects of bias were controlled and minimized through the inclusion of 
minority groups in the normative sample. 
 Second, the examination of reliability and validity information was presented for 
the different racial, ethnic, and gender groups. 
 A particularly powerful element of content-description validity is the demonstration 
of excellent internal consistency reliability for the different racial, ethnic, and 
gender groups. 
 Finally, the use of differential item functioning analysis was used to reduce item 
bias during item selection. Delta score values were used to remove items that 
appeared to be biased against targeted groups.
 the LDDI will tell you the extent to which students’ skill patterns in a 
particular area (e.g., reading, writing) are consistent with those individuals 
known to have LD in that area (e.g., dyslexia, dysgraphia).
STRENGTHS AND 
LIMITATIONS 
INTERNAL CONSISTENCY 
RELIABILITY COEFFICIENTS EXCEED 
.90 FOR ALL SCALES. IN 
ADDITION, EVIDENCE FOR 
STABILITY AND INTERSCORER 
RELIABILITY IS PROVIDED, AND 
COEFFICIENTS ARE IN THE .80S 
AND .90S. THUS, THE 
LDDI CAN BE USED WITH 
CONFIDENCE TO YIELD 
CONSISTENT RESULTS.
STRENGTHS 
CONTROLLING FOR TEST BIAS 
LDDI WAS BUILT TO MINIMIZE THE EFFECTS 
OF BIAS. NUMEROUS STEPS WERE TAKEN 
TO DETECT AND ELIMINATE SOURCES OF 
CULTURAL, GENDER, AND RACIAL BIAS. 
FIRST, THE EFFECTS OF BIAS WERE 
CONTROLLED AND MINIMIZED THROUGH 
THE INCLUSION OF MINORITY GROUPS IN 
THE NORMATIVE SAMPLE. SECOND, THE 
EXAMINATION OF RELIABILITY AND 
VALIDITY INFORMATION WAS PRESENTED 
FOR THE DIFFERENT RACIAL, ETHNIC, AND 
GENDER GROUPS. A PARTICULARLY 
POWERFUL ELEMENT OF CONTENT-DESCRIPTION 
VALIDITY IS THE 
DEMONSTRATION OF EXCELLENT INTERNAL 
CONSISTENCY RELIABILITY FOR THE 
DIFFERENT RACIAL, ETHNIC, AND GENDER 
GROUPS. FINALLY, THE USE OF 
DIFFERENTIAL ITEM FUNCTIONING 
ANALYSIS WAS USED TO REDUCE ITEM BIAS 
DURING ITEM SELECTION. DELTA SCORE 
VALUES WERE USED TO REMOVE ITEMS 
THAT APPEARED TO BE BIASED AGAINST 
TARGETED GROUPS
LIMITATIONS 
THE LDDI IS LIMITED TO A 
SINGLE LANGUAGE WHICH IS 
ENGLISH, WHICH LIMITS NON-ENGLISH 
SPEAKING CHILDREN 
TO BE ABLE TO TAKE THE TEST. 
ALSO, THE TEST IS RATED BY THE 
EXAMINER SO THERE IS NO 
MEASUREABLE SCORE THAT 
CAN BE COMPARED AGAINST 
OTHER CHILDREN’S SCORES; IT 
IS OPINION-BASED AND VARIES 
BETWEEN EACH EXAMINER
PRECAUTIONS: 
 The examiner should heavily focus on the child during the assessment to 
ensure a proper rating. If they are rated incorrectly, the consequences of a 
poor rating could be devastating to the child’s future. The area should be 
well lit and the seating comfortable for the child. Because there is a 
listening section of the LDDI, the room should be quiet and easy to hear to 
avoid all potential distractions and interruptions. The scale should not be 
used as basis for planning individual instructional program
THANKYOU FOR 
LISTENING 
ANY 
QUESTIONS!

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Learning disability!!!

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  • 3. Learning Disability  Definition:  "Specific learning disability" is defined as follows by IDEA:  The term "specific learning disability" means a disorder in one or more of the basic psychological processes involved in understanding or in using language, spoken or written, which disorder may manifest itself in the imperfect ability to listen, think, speak, read, write, spell, or do mathematical calculations.  Disorders included. Such term includes such conditions as perceptual disabilities, brain injury, minimal brain dysfunction, dyslexia, and developmental aphasia.  Disorders not included. Such term does not include a learning problem that is primarily the result of visual, hearing, or motor disabilities, of mental retardation, of emotional disturbance, or of environmental, cultural, or economic disadvantage.
  • 4. Components from 6 different Definitions:  By their nature are heterogeneous disorders.  Represent specific types of under achievement (i.e. a person demonstrates appreciably less ability in some skills than in others)  Are probably the result of some central nervous system (CNS) dys-funtion.  Involve some form of psychological process (i.e. Intrinsic) disorder  Can be manifested in academic disorders  Can be manifested in spoken language disorders.  Don’t result from other conditions such as mental retardation, behaviour disorders, and so forth  Can be manifested in thinking disorders. (derailment, poverty of speech, tangentially, illogicality, perseveration, neologism)
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  • 7. TYPES OF LEARNING DISORDERS: Dyslexia 315.00(F81.0) a language-based disability in which a person has trouble understanding written words. It may also be referred to as reading disability or reading disorder. Dyscalculia 315.1(FB1.2) a mathematical disability in which a person has a difficult time solving arithmetic problems and grasping math concepts. Dysgraphia 315.2(F81. 81) a writing disability in which a person finds it hard to form letters or write within a defined space.
  • 8. TYPES OF LEARNING DISORDERS disabilities in which a person has difficulty understanding language despite normal hearing and vision. a neurological disorder which originates in the right hemisphere of the brain, causing problems with visual-spatial, intuitive, organizational, evaluative and holistic processing functions.
  • 9. DYSLEXIA:  Dyslexia is the name for specific learning disabilities in reading.  Dyslexia is often characterized by difficulties with accurate word recognition, decoding and spelling.  Dyslexia may cause problems with reading comprehension and slow down vocabulary growth.  Dyslexia may result in poor reading fluency and reading out loud.  Dyslexia is neurological and often genetic.  Dyslexia is not the result of poor instruction.  With the proper support, almost all people with dyslexia can become good readers and writers.
  • 10. SIGNS & SYMPTOMS  The Dyslexia Research Trust6 includes these as the most common signs and symptoms associated with dyslexia:  Learning to read - the child, despite having normal intelligence and receiving proper teaching and parental support, has difficulty learning to read.  Milestones reached later - the child learns to crawl, walk, talk, throw or catch things, ride a bicycle later than the majority of other kids.  Speech - apart from being slow to learn to speak, the child commonly mispronounces words, finds rhyming extremely challenging, and does not appear to distinguish between different word sounds.  Slow at learning sets of data - at school the child takes much longer than the other children to learn the letters of the alphabet and how they are pronounced. There may also be problems remembering the days of the week, months of the year, colors, and some arithmetic tables.
  • 11. SIGNS & SYMPTOMS  Coordination - the child may seem clumsier than his or her peers. Catching a ball may be difficult.  Left and right - the child commonly gets "left" and "right" mixed up.  Reversal - numbers and letters may be reversed without realizing.  Spelling - may not follow a pattern of progression seen in other children. The child may learn how to spell a word today, and completely forget the next day. One word may be spelt in a variety of ways on the same page.  Phonology problems - phonology refers to the speech sounds in a language. If a word has more than two syllables, phonology processing becomes much more difficult. For example, with the word "unfortunately" a person with dyslexia may be able to process the sounds "un" and "ly", but not the ones in between.
  • 12. SIGNS & SYMPTOMS  Concentration span - children with dyslexia commonly find it hard to concentrate for long, compared to other children. Many adults with dyslexia say this is because after a few minutes of non-stop struggling, the child is mentally exhausted. A higher number of children with dyslexia also have ADHD (attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder), compared to the rest of the population.  Sequencing ideas - when a person with dyslexia expresses a sequence of ideas, they may seem illogical for people without the condition.  Autoimmune conditions - people with dyslexia are more likely to develop immunological problems, such as hay fever, asthma, eczema, and other allergies.
  • 13. Types of Dyslexia:  The types are identified by the nature of the problem within the central nervous system /brain.  Trauma Dyslexia  Usually occurs after some form of brain trauma or injury to the area of the brain that controls reading and writing. It is a permanent brain injury rarely seen in today's school-age population because it results from severe head injuries.  Primary dyslexia  It’s a dysfunction of, rather than damage to, the left side of the brain (cerebral cortex) and does not change with age. Individuals with this type of dyslexia are rarely able to read above a fourth-grade level and may struggle with reading, spelling, and writing as adults. Primary dyslexia is passed in family lines through their genes (hereditary). It is found more often in boys than in girls.  Secondary/developmental  Type of dyslexia is felt to be caused by hormonal development or malnutrition during the early stages of fetal development. Poor parenting, abuse, neglect, and/or poor nutrition during the developmental years 0 to 5 are also known causes. Developmental dyslexia diminishes as the child matures. It is also more common in boys.
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  • 20. Learning Disabilities Diagnostic Inventory- LDDI  Description  The learning disabilities diagnostic inventory (LDDI) is an assessment device composed of items taken from the research and theoretical literature on specific learning disabilities (LD) especially as it pertains to the neuropsychological aspects. The items represent specific observable behaviours associated with LD in listening, speaking reading writing mathematics and reasoning.  Consists of:  six independent scales, each with 15 easy-to-rate items.  Stanines are used to identify the likelihood of intrinsic processing disorders in the six areas—Listening, Speaking, Reading, Writing, Mathematics, Reasoning  also to conduct a profile analysis to determine the extent to which a student’s LDDI profile reflects that which is associated with learning disabilities.
  • 21. Learning Disabilities Diagnostic Inventory  AGE RANGE:  Identify learning disabilities in children ages 8 to 17.  TIME PERIOD:  The LDDI can be completed in 10 minutes by a teacher or speech-language pathologist who is familiar with the student’s skills.  Scales & Forms  Listening  Speaking  Reading  Writing  Mathematics  Reasoning
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  • 30. LDDI SCORING RAW SCORES  Total number of points rated for each scale.  Don’t tell anything in particular, just help in finding out stanines. STANINES  Stanines are converted from raw scores using the tables in the appendix.  Standard scores with a mean of 5 and a standard deviation of 1.96) and percentiles  Identify the likelihood of intrinsic processing disorders in the six areas assessed by the lddi.  Conduct a profile analysis to determine the extent to which a student’s LDDI profile reflects which is associated with learning difficulties. PERCENTILES  Percentile ranks represent values that indicate the percentage of the distribution of a representative sample of individuals of the same age group
  • 31. Psychometrics of the Test:  Reliability Internal consistency reliability coefficients exceed .90 for all scales. evidence for stability and inter-scorer reliability is also provided and coefficients are in the .80s and .90s.  Thus, the LDDI can be used with confidence to yield consistent results.  Validity These studies involved extensive item selection and differentiation examinations, which included confirmatory factor analysis; as well as studies that examined the lddi’s relationship to age, academic achievement, group differentiation, gender, and ethnicity-all of which support the validity of the lddi scores. Factor analysis research also validated the lddi’s factor structure. These studies all provide evidence that the LDDI yields valid results that can be used with confidence to identify the presence or absence of learning difficulties in children and adolescents.
  • 32. Controlling for Test Bias  The LDDI was built to minimise the effects of bias  First, the effects of bias were controlled and minimized through the inclusion of minority groups in the normative sample.  Second, the examination of reliability and validity information was presented for the different racial, ethnic, and gender groups.  A particularly powerful element of content-description validity is the demonstration of excellent internal consistency reliability for the different racial, ethnic, and gender groups.  Finally, the use of differential item functioning analysis was used to reduce item bias during item selection. Delta score values were used to remove items that appeared to be biased against targeted groups.
  • 33.  the LDDI will tell you the extent to which students’ skill patterns in a particular area (e.g., reading, writing) are consistent with those individuals known to have LD in that area (e.g., dyslexia, dysgraphia).
  • 34. STRENGTHS AND LIMITATIONS INTERNAL CONSISTENCY RELIABILITY COEFFICIENTS EXCEED .90 FOR ALL SCALES. IN ADDITION, EVIDENCE FOR STABILITY AND INTERSCORER RELIABILITY IS PROVIDED, AND COEFFICIENTS ARE IN THE .80S AND .90S. THUS, THE LDDI CAN BE USED WITH CONFIDENCE TO YIELD CONSISTENT RESULTS.
  • 35. STRENGTHS CONTROLLING FOR TEST BIAS LDDI WAS BUILT TO MINIMIZE THE EFFECTS OF BIAS. NUMEROUS STEPS WERE TAKEN TO DETECT AND ELIMINATE SOURCES OF CULTURAL, GENDER, AND RACIAL BIAS. FIRST, THE EFFECTS OF BIAS WERE CONTROLLED AND MINIMIZED THROUGH THE INCLUSION OF MINORITY GROUPS IN THE NORMATIVE SAMPLE. SECOND, THE EXAMINATION OF RELIABILITY AND VALIDITY INFORMATION WAS PRESENTED FOR THE DIFFERENT RACIAL, ETHNIC, AND GENDER GROUPS. A PARTICULARLY POWERFUL ELEMENT OF CONTENT-DESCRIPTION VALIDITY IS THE DEMONSTRATION OF EXCELLENT INTERNAL CONSISTENCY RELIABILITY FOR THE DIFFERENT RACIAL, ETHNIC, AND GENDER GROUPS. FINALLY, THE USE OF DIFFERENTIAL ITEM FUNCTIONING ANALYSIS WAS USED TO REDUCE ITEM BIAS DURING ITEM SELECTION. DELTA SCORE VALUES WERE USED TO REMOVE ITEMS THAT APPEARED TO BE BIASED AGAINST TARGETED GROUPS
  • 36. LIMITATIONS THE LDDI IS LIMITED TO A SINGLE LANGUAGE WHICH IS ENGLISH, WHICH LIMITS NON-ENGLISH SPEAKING CHILDREN TO BE ABLE TO TAKE THE TEST. ALSO, THE TEST IS RATED BY THE EXAMINER SO THERE IS NO MEASUREABLE SCORE THAT CAN BE COMPARED AGAINST OTHER CHILDREN’S SCORES; IT IS OPINION-BASED AND VARIES BETWEEN EACH EXAMINER
  • 37. PRECAUTIONS:  The examiner should heavily focus on the child during the assessment to ensure a proper rating. If they are rated incorrectly, the consequences of a poor rating could be devastating to the child’s future. The area should be well lit and the seating comfortable for the child. Because there is a listening section of the LDDI, the room should be quiet and easy to hear to avoid all potential distractions and interruptions. The scale should not be used as basis for planning individual instructional program
  • 38. THANKYOU FOR LISTENING ANY QUESTIONS!