In order to define a child as
"learning disabled", the following five main step/conditions have to
be met. These five steps are an
application of CHC theory to the field of learning disabilities.
To note: CHC is a theory about the
structure of cognitive abilities and not about learning disabilities, but it
can be applied to
learning disability definition. (You can
find out more about CHC theory and cognitive abilities in the presentation
series "intelligence and cognitive abilities" found at the right
column of this blog. This series also
gives information about which tests measure which abilities).
These five steps are my abbreviation of
the process detailed in this article (and many others) of which I already
recommended here before:
INTEGRATION OF RESPONSE TO INTERVENTION AND
NORM-REFERENCED TESTS IN LEARNING DISABILITY
IDENTIFICATION:
LEARNING FROM THE TOWER OF BABEL.
DAWN P. FLANAGAN ,
SAMUEL O. ORTIZ, VINCENT C. ALFONSO and
AGNIESZKA M. DYNDA. Psychology in the Schools, Vol. 43(7), 2006
This is a free
article. The definition steps are
somewhere in the middle of it.
These five steps are
serial and dependent on each other. If a
child does not "pass" step 1, he doesn't have learning disability and
there's no need to check if he passes step 2.
If he passes step 1 but doesn't pass step 2, clearly he doesn't have learning
disability and there's no need to continue to step 3 and so on.
Step 1: reading decoding
and/or reading comprehension and/or basic writing and/or expressing complex
ideas through writing and/or math are significantly lower than expected for the
child's age and grade (the child's results in tests that measure
reading/writing/math are lower than average for his age and grade by at least one
standard deviation).
Note that we are not
talking here about the child's grades in various school subjects. We are talking about the basic skills of
reading/writing/math as measured by specific tests for reading/writing/math.
Nor are we talking about
measures like phonological processing, rapid naming etc. We are talking only about measures of reading/writing/math
themselves, like reading speed, word decoding precision etc.
Step 2: One (or more)
cognitive ability (fluid ability, short term memory, processing speed, visual
processing, auditory processing, long term storage and retrieval, crystallized
knowledge) is significantly lower than expected for
the child's age and grade (the child's results in tests that measure a specific
ability or this ability's index score are lower than average for his age and
grade by at least one standard deviation).
Step 3: There is an empirical or a logical link
between the findings in step1 and the findings in step 2. We want to see whether the low cognitive
ability/abilities found in step 2 can explain the child's reading/writing/math
difficulties.
For example, if the child has poor word
decoding, and poor auditory processing (especially phonological processing), we
can assume that the decoding difficulties are due to the phonological
disabilities.
This step assumes that the child's functioning
in reading/writing/math is a symptom
of disabilities found in one or more cognitive abilities. The disabilities are not in
reading/writhing/math. The disabilities
are in the cognitive abilities and they are expressed in reading/writing/math.
Step 4: most of the child's cognitive abilities (fluid
ability, short term memory, processing speed, visual processing, auditory
processing, long term storage and retrieval, crystallized knowledge) are within
normal limits.
This step emphasizes that learning disability is a specific phenomenon and not a global, wide-scale one.
A child who functions poorly at most
abilities is not learning disabled according to this definition. It's certainly possible that this child will
have learning disabilities as well, but it's reasonable to assume, that they
will not be the main reasons for his poor functioning in
reading/writing/math. The main reason
for these difficulties would be low ability.
Step 5: exclusionary factors are not better
explanations of the child's poor performance in reading/writing/math. If the child's parents are going through
divorce and the child is preoccupied with this and can't concentrate in class,
or if the child has significant other emotional problems that impair his
functioning, or if the child has just immigrated or had poor teachers or
switched schools too often etc. - these
factors might explain the poor performance in reading/writing/math better than a
learning disability. In this case we won't define the child as having learning
disability.
As in the previous step, it's possible that a
child whose main reason for poor functioning is exclusionary factors, also has
learning disabilities. But because
learning disability is not the main reason for his difficulties, we won't
define him as learning disabled. It's
possible that in the future, after the family situation stabilizes or after the
child get therapy and so on, we'll assess him again and see if the main problem
then would be learning disability.
Only if the child "passes" all five
steps, he can be defined as learning disabled and the source of his disability
can be identified (this is the low cognitive ability/abilities that we found in
step 2).
This is a "narrow" definition. Working in light of this definition will
reduce the number of children identified as learning disabled. I can add from my own and my colleagues'
experience, that using these steps makes the picture clear and helps pinpoint the
reasons for the child's difficulties and plan an intervention targeted at the
source of the problem.
The definition can be summarized in one
sentence:
Below average aptitude – achievement consistency within
otherwise normal ability profile.
Aptitude is
measured by cognitive abilities, achievement is measured by
reading/writing/math tests. Below
average aptitude – achievement consistency:
the child's low functioning level in a
specific cognitive ability fits his low performance pattern in
reading/writing/math.
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