Learning
disabilities and attention challenges are perplexing because they
may cause very "able" individuals to be unsuccessful or
"disabled" in certain situations.
Learning
disabled children and adults look and act like the rest of the population.
They are bright and often talented in creative or physical areas.
Their "disability," with its accompanying frustration,
withdrawal, or coping behaviors, rears its head in the face of specific
tasks or expectations.
Individuals
with learning disabilities generally have something different or
perhaps not completely developed in the way that they process or
think about information.
The
way that they process is not wrong, but it may not be efficient,
particularly for academic tasks. Because they are obviously intelligent
and generally do some kinds of tasks very easily, parents and teachers
may, at first, see the learning disabled student as lazy or unmotivated.
With
very few exceptions, learners of any age want to be successful and
would if they could.
While
we never want to take away a student's thinking style, the key to
teaching the learning disabled student is to help him or her to
develop the underlying thinking processes that will allow him to
take-in, remember, and use information efficiently. Creating a solid
foundation of basic skills is a critical piece of the picture, but
only when the brain has been prepared to understand and hold onto
those skills.
It
has long been thought that learning disabilities could not be resolved;
that these individuals would just have to find ways to compensate
for them. However, our experience in the field and current research
on brain function and learning has shown otherwise.
Students
are often taught compensating strategies to help
them cope with their learning disabilities. These are helpful and
important but they are not enough! Students with
learning differences need to be taught in a different way, because
these students can learn.
At
the Stowell Learning Center , we recognize that many individuals
with learning challenges need to be taught differently. In order
to make real changes in their learning, we explore the underlying
cause of the learning difficulty, the thinking/processing skills.
This way, instead of focusing our instruction on the symptoms, we
can create changes where they will permanently impact the individual's
learning…in the neuro-pathways of the brain.
Individuals
with learning and attention challenges often have wonderful talents
or abilities in other areas. These may tend to get overlooked
in the confusion and frustration of poor school performance. Many
of the outstanding artists, musicians, actors, athletes, and inventors
of our time have had differences in thinking that caused "learning
disabilities." Yet, it was precisely those differences
that were the key to their success.
As
we seek to help students work through and overcome their inefficiencies
in learning, it is also important to notice and encourage their
areas of strength and uniqueness.
Please
use our newsletter archive for more information about
learning disabilities and programs. There is a wealth of information
and resources contained there. Click Here
to go to the newsletter archive. |