National Institute for Literacy
 

[LearningDisabilities] Educational resources for someone interested in a profession working with

robinschwarz1 at aol.com robinschwarz1 at aol.com
Sat Jan 28 00:36:19 EST 2006


But are these programs for ADULT education/learning and about adults
with LD? Lots of schools--including AU in DC have GREAT LD
programs--but they have very little about adults with LD, if anything.
As I said once before, the child models of identification, intervention
etc. really are not well suited to adult learners. Robin Schwarz

-----Original Message-----
From: Mary Bowman Kruhm <mbowman1 at jhu.edu>
To: The Learning Disabilities Discussion List
<learningdisabilities at nifl.gov>
Sent: Tue, 24 Jan 2006 13:09:09 -0500
Subject: Re: [LearningDisabilities] Educational resources for someone
interested in a profession working with

As does Johns Hopkins University. JHU's program is for graduate
students
with several cohort/.partnership program with Montgomery County, MD,
Public Schools so that students can earn while getting their M.S. We
do,
in fact, have a number of students in the program who are identified as
themselves LD and accommodations are obviously made.

==Mary BK

bgiven at gmu.edu wrote:


>also, there is a strong LD teacher preparation program at George Mason

University in Fairfax, VA. bkg

>

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