Characteristics of Students with Learning Disabilities
* Adapted from College Students with Learning Disabilities Brochure. (1983).
L.C. Brinckerhoff, Ph.D. (Ed.). Columbus, OH: Association
on Higher Education and Disability (AHEAD).
College students with learning disabilities are intelligent, talented, and capable.
Typically they have developed a variety of strategies for compensating for their
learning disabilities. The degree of severity of the disability varies from individual
to individual.
Individuals who come from divergent cultural and language backgrounds may exhibit
many of the oral and written language behaviors mentioned below, but this does
not necessarily mean they have a learning disability.
The following list of characteristics of students with learning disabilities
is merely an introduction and is not comprehensive:
Reading Skills
Written Language Skills
Oral Language Skills
Mathematical Skills
Organizational and Study Skills
Attention and Concentration
Social Skills
Reading Skills
- Slow reading rate and/or difficulty in modifying reading rate in accordance
with material difficulty.
- Poor comprehension and retention.
- Difficulty identifying important points
and themes.
- Poor mastery of phonics, confusion of similar words, and difficulty
integrating new vocabulary.
- Skipping words or lines of printed material.
Written
Language Skills
- Difficulty with sentence structure.
- Frequent spelling errors especially
in specialized and foreign vocabulary.
- Inability to copy correctly from
a book or the blackboard.
- Slow writer.
- Poor penmanship (e.g. poorly formed letters, trouble with spacing,
overly large hand writing.)
Oral Language
Skills
- Inability to concentrate on and comprehend oral language.
- Difficulty in
oral expression of ideas which he/she seems to understand.
- Written expression
is better than oral expression.
- Difficulty speaking grammatically correct
English.
- Cannot tell a story in proper sequences.
Mathematical
Skills
- Incomplete mastery of basic facts.
- Reverses numbers.
- Confuses operational symbols, especially + and x.
- Copies problems incorrectly
from one line to another.
- Difficulty recalling the sequence of operational
processes.
- Inability to understand and retain abstract concepts.
- Difficulty comprehending
word problems.
- Reasoning deficits.
Organizational
and Study Skills
- Difficulties with time management.
- Slow to start and complete tasks.
- Repeated inability, on a day to day basis,
to recall what has been taught.
- Difficulty following oral and written directions.
- Difficulty preparing
for and taking tests.
- Lack of overall organization in written notes and
compositions.
- Demonstrates short attention span during lectures.
- Inefficient use of
library reference materials.
Attention
and Concentration
- Trouble focusing and sustaining attention on academic tasks.
- Fluctuating
attention span during lectures, as well as easily distracted by outside
stimuli.
- Difficulty juggling numerous tasks at the same time and goes in "overload" quickly.
- Hyperactivity
and excessive movements may accompany the inability to focus attention.
Social Skills
- Problems detecting the difference between sincere and sarcastic comments.
- Inability to recognize other subtle changes in vocal tone.
- Difficulty interpreting nonverbal messages.
- Lowered self-esteem due
to disability, causing difficulties when meeting new people or
working cooperatively with others.
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