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[Diversity 1113] Learning Disabilities Guest Discussion Announcement
Daphne Greenberg
ALCDGG at langate.gsu.eduWed Oct 14 12:36:17 EDT 2009
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I know that many of you are interested in learning disabilities.
Therefore, you may be interested in knowing that from Oct. 27th through
Oct. 29th there will be a guest discussion on: Common Cognitive Deficits
in Dyslexic Students * Implications for Differentiated Instruction
Here are the details:
To subscribe go to:
http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/learningdisabilities
The following are the guest speakers:
Guest Speaker #1: Brant Hayenga, Educational Diagnostician
Brant Hayenga is an educational diagnostician for the Rio Rancho
Public
Schools in Rio Rancho, NM. After graduation from the University of New
Mexico
with degrees in Geology and Education he was an elementary ESL reading
teacher on the Navajo reservation for five years. He then went on to
earn his
M.A. in Special Education (with an emphasis on educational
diagnostics) at
the University of North Texas. He taught ESL reading for three more
years
in Texas, primarily to immigrants from Mexico. For the past six years
has
worked as an educational diagnostician in Texas and New Mexico.
Guest Speaker #2: Dr. Mary Loescher, Clinical/School Psychologist
Dr. Mary S. Loescher is a clinically licensed and a licensed school
psychologist with the Rio Rancho Public Schools. After graduating
from the
University of New Mexico she worked as a speech and language
pathologist at the
Veterans Administration Hospital and the Albuquerque Public Schools
for 15
years. She completed a doctoral degree from the Fielding Institute in
Santa Barbara, California and has worked as a clinical psychologist in
private
practice, as a school psychologist in rural New Mexico schools and on
the
Navajo reservation before coming to work for the Rio Rancho Public
Schools.
Tentative Agenda
1. Welcome, Self-Introductions
2. Outline for Discussion
3. Goals for the Discussion
a) To improve understanding of deficits in cognitive processes other
than phonological/auditory processing that are commonly comorbid with
dyslexia
b) Examine potential modifications to intervention that accommodates
these deficits
c) Discuss how the identified cognitive processes are known to
decline
with age, increasing the likelihood of dyslexia intervention in adults
older than thirty being confounded by comorbid deficits.
4. Material to be Covered in Discussion on Day 1
Common Cognitive Deficits in Dyslexic Students
There is now a broad consensus that human thinking, learning, and
memory
relies on a set of distinct, but interrelated, cognitive abilities.
These
abilities can be briefly summarized as: auditory processing (correctly
processing the sounds of our language, including phonological
awareness), visual
processing, short-term memory and working memory (including executive
attentional skills), long-term memory (placing information in and
retrieving it
from long-term memory), acculturation knowledge (knowledge of the
language,
concepts, and information of our culture), fluid reasoning (problem
solving and reasoning with unfamiliar information), processing speed
(speed of
thinking ability on simple visual or auditory tasks), and quantitative
knowledge (understanding and applying math skills and concepts).
Strengths and
weaknesses in these eight cognitive abilities affect the quality and
rate of
an individual’s learning.
Phonological processing is widely accepted as the core cognitive
process
underlying most dyslexic students’ reading and writing difficulties.
Much
research has been published about identifying and remediating
phonological
processing deficits. Many dyslexic students also present with
significant
deficits in other basic cognitive processes that are distinct from,
but
related to, phonological processing. It is important to note that
dyslexia is a
heterogeneous disorder and numerous studies have been conducted to
identify
subtype profiles within the heterogeneity of the disorder as a whole.
In my
practice as an educational diagnostician I conduct evaluations
designed to
supply information about dyslexic students’ individual profiles of
basic
cognitive processes, in order to recommend appropriate interventions.
I
would like to focus this discussion on the inter-relationship between
phonological/auditory processing, verbal working memory, processing
speed, long-term
retrieval (specifically rapid automatic naming or RAN), and executive
attentional skills. Most dyslexic students present with deficits in
one, many,
or all of these areas. Verbal working memory, executive attention, and
processing speed are all known to decline with age (beginning
approximately in
the thirties), making awareness of these possibly comorbid deficits
even
more germane to the adult literacy community.
Here is one brief explanation of how deficits in those basic cognitive
functions inter-relate and contribute to dyslexia. When reading
unknown words,
slow (non-automatic) retrieval of letter/sound associations from
long-term
memory negatively affects working memory. Verbal working memory is a
limited capacity, time-dependent cognitive process. If information
(letters,
sounds, and words) is being supplied to working memory too slowly (or
in a
degraded form) due to phonological processing deficits and/or
processing
speed deficits, there is some chance that the first letters/sounds or
words to
arrive in working memory have begun to fade by the time the last
letters in
that sequence have arrived. Information that has fallen apart (been
partially forgotten) in working memory is eventually stored in
long-term memory,
and information stored in a degraded form is harder to recall. Verbal
working memory is also highly dependent upon adequate attentional
skills. When a
reader is attempting to read, and their attention is inappropriately
diverted by irrelevant information (including anxiety), the pertinent
information in working memory is forgotten. Working memory contains a
limited number
of “slots”, and individuals with weak attentional skills fill
some of
their slots with non-pertinent information. The incorrect or
incomplete
information encoded in their long-term memory slows down processing
and makes
long-term memory encoding and retrieval (RAN) more difficult. Slow
processing
speed can make it more difficult to recall even high quality
information
from long-term memory.
Marilyn Adams indicates in her seminal work, Beginning to Read, that
the
development of a functional sight word vocabulary (words recognized
instantly on sight without effortful decoding) is dependent upon
building mental
inter-letter association networks. Letters commonly seen together
begin to
share neural activation energy and, after sufficient, accurate
practice, the
sight of the first letter(s) in the common string of letters will
automatically activate the other letters. Dyslexic students don’t
perceive the
adjacent letters quickly enough in sequence to build this shared
activation
energy (due to phonological processing deficits, processing speed
deficits,
attentional deficits, RAN deficits, etc.). By the time the second
letter has
been identified, the activation energy from the first letter has
already
faded, so no inter-letter association can form. Without the
inter-letter
associations decoding proceeds letter-by-letter, which is too slow to
be
maintained in verbal working memory, and greatly slows the growth of a
sight
vocabulary. Simultaneous processing (figuring out the letter/sound) and
storage
(remembering the previous letters already identified) significantly
taxes
the working memories of students with verbal working memory deficits.
This lack of automaticity in word reading then translates up the food
chain to comprehension. When decoded words are supplied to verbal
working
memory too slowly, they begin to be forgotten, and building meaning
from
incomplete information is difficult. Forgetting in working memory also
occurs due
to weak attentional skills (inhibiting irrelevant information), and
RAN
deficits, which cause slow retrieval from long-term memory.
Most dyslexic readers are born with a core deficit in
phonological/auditory processing, but some then layer on verbal
working memory, attentional,
RAN, or processing speed deficits, along with emotional interference
as their
reading failure experiences accumulate. Appropriate intervention is
informed by a well-interpreted profile of strengths and weaknesses in
basic
cognitive processes. With that information differentiated
interventions can be
designed, implemented, and monitored.
5. Questions for Subscribers
a) Do you have adult learners who present with similarly
differential
profiles?
b) Does your intervention program have multiple levels of support
to
accommodate learners with multiple cognitive deficits beyond
phonological/auditory processing?
6. Invitation to Ask Questions and Comment
7. Sample Case Studies for Day 2
a) Jonathan * Multiple severe cognitive deficits significantly
affecting learning
b) William * Fewer cognitive deficits with reduced impact on
learning
8. Recommended Interventions for Jonathan and William that take
into
account different cognitive profiles for Day 3
9. Suggested Readings
a) Dehn, Milton J., (2008). Working memory and academic learning:
Assessment and intervention. Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley and Sons.
b) Horn, John L., Blankson, N. (2005) Foundations for better
understanding of cognitive abilities. In D. Flanagan & P. Harrison
(Eds.)
Contemporary Intellectual Assessment: Theories, tests, and issues (pp.
41-68). New
York, NY: Guilford Press.
10. Additional Resources/Websites
11. Wrap Up
To subscribe go to:
http://www.nifl.gov/mailman/listinfo/learningdisabilities
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