Educational Psychology: Learning Differences and Learning Needs
Educational Psychology: Learning Differences and Learning Needs
Disability
- inability to do something specific
Handicap
- disadvantage in certain situations
- from “cap-in-hand”— when people with disabilities were once forced to beg in order to survive
Person-First Language
- “students with behavior disorder / placed at risk”
- emphasis on student first
Identity-First Reference
- believe that disability is part of their identity
- ex. person with hearing losses prefer to be called deaf because he is proud to be part of deaf culture
Fluid Intelligence
- mental efficiency
- grounded in brain development
- neurophysiological underpinings: brain volume, myelination, density of dopamine receptors, processing
abilities in prefrontal lobe (working memory)
- sensitive to injuries and diseases of brain
Crystallized Intelligence
- ability to apply problem-solving methods
- learned skills and knowledge
- appropriate in cultural context
- “application to new domains”
- ex. reading, knowing how to use Uber
2. Musical
3. Interpersonal
- understand desires and needs of others then respond appropriately
4. Intrapersonal
- can be anyone with detailed knowledge of self
5. Naturalist
- plants, animals, and natural world
6. Linguistic
- sounds, rhythms, and word meanings
7. Spatial
- perceive visual and spatial world accurately
- ex. sculptor, navigator, architect
8. Bodily-Kinesthetic
9. Existential
- deeper questions about human existence and life
Entry Points in Designing a Curriculum
1. Narrative
2. Logical-quantitative
3. Aesthetic
4. Experiential
5. Interpersonal
6. Existential/Foundational
Sternberg’s Triarchic Theory of Successful Intelligence
- skills needed to be successful
- succesful intelligence: intelligence is about setting and achieving personal goals based on own
definition of success in cultural context
> analytical skills: evaluating, analyzing, judging, comparing (often taught in schools and
traditional intelligence tests)
> creative skills: coping with new experiences— 1. insight (ability to deal
with novel situations and find new solutions)
2. automaticity (ability to become automatic in thinking and problem-solving)
> practical skills: choosing an environment where you can succeed, adapting, and
reshaping (used in practical matters like career chocie or social skills
Binet’s Dilemma
- “How can students who will need special instruction and help be identified early in school careers?”
- 58 tests
- mental age: if a child who succeeded on items passed by most 6 year-olds then his mental age is 6
even if he is actually 7, 8, 9…
- intelligence quotient (IQ): mental age / chronological age x 100
- deviation IQ: number that tells how much a person’s score is above or below the average for his age
group (used in present time)
Flynn Effect
- in a decade, the average score goes up about 3 points on standardized IQ tests
Gender Differences
- boys: slightly more variable scores (very high or very low scores)
- boys: diagnosed with learning disabilities, ADHD, and autism more
Creativity
- requires deep understanding of the subject
- existing knowledge + improvising and inventing to provide something new
- invention must be intended
> novelty / originality
> high quality / effectiveness / usefulness
Paul Torrance
- “Father of Creativity”
- 2 types of creativity: verbal and graphic (tests)
Divergent Thinking
- ability to propose many different ideas / answers
> originality: determined statistically (must be given by fewer than 5 / 10 people out of every
100)
> flexibility: number of different categories of responses
> fluency: best predictor, sheer number of responses
Convergent Thinking
- common ability to identify only 1 answer, usually determined statistically
2. Creativity-relevant processes
- work habits and personality traits
Incubation
- time away
- unconscious working through the problem
Brainstorming
- separate process of creating ideas from process of evaluating
* evaluation often inhibits creativity
Learning Preferences
- preferences for particular learning environments
Illusion of Understanding
- students think they understand because the content seems less difficult —> become overly optimistic
and don’t monitior learning or use other metacognitive skills
Richard Mayer’s 3 Facets of Visualizer-Verbalizer
A. Cognitive Ability
1. High Spatial Ability: good abilities to create, remember, manipulate images
2. Low Spatial Ability
B. Cognitive Style
1. Visualizer: thinks using images and visual info
2. Verbalizer: thinks using words and verbal info
C. Learning Preference
1. Visual Learner: prefers instruction using pictures
2. Verbal Learner: prefers instruction using words
Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA)
- requires states to provide a free, appropriate public education (FAPE) for all students with
disabilities
- zero reject: no exceptions
- also applicable to students with communicable diseases like AIDS
- child find system: alerts and educates the public about services
Mainstreaming
- includes children with special needs in few general education classes as convenient
Integration
- fitting child into existing class structures
Inclusion
- restructuring educational settings to promote beloging for all students
Attention Disorders
- some areas of the brain may be smaller
- blood flow appears to be lower than typical in cerebellum and frontal lobes
- levels of some neurotransmitter chemical and electrical activity are different in certain brain areas
compared to normal
Language Disbabilities
- immature auditory system— brain processes basic auditory info in a way similar to brain of children 3-4
years younger
Learning Disability
- perform significantly below what would be expected
Phonemic Awareness
- problems with relating sounds to letters that make up words, which makes spelling hard as well
- for English-speakers
Morphological Awareness
- problems with ability to combine porphemes into words
- for Chinese-speakers
Learned Helplessness
- students do not understand why they are having trouble
Hyperactivity
- attention disorders / impulsive-hyperactivity OR BOTH
A. Speech Disorders
- cannot produce sounds effectively for speaking
> articulation disorders: distorting sound (lisp), substituting one sound for another (shairp for chair),
adding a sound (chuch air for chair)
> stuttering (fluency disorder): 3-4 years old where causes are unknown but might include emotional or
neurological problems / learned behavior
> voicing problems: speaking with an inappropriate pitch, quality, or loudness, or in monotone
B. Language Disorders
- deficient in ability to understand or express language
- seldom speak or rely only on gestures
Students with Emotional / Behavioral Difficulties
- aggressive, anxious, withdrawn, depressed
- difficulty following rules, paying attention, staying in seat or interacting
Suicide
- give away prized possessions
- depressed or hyperactive
- sometimes, suicide risk increases as depression decreases (because depressed do not have energy to
plan suicide attempt)
- suddenly seeming much better = could be because he has firmly decided to end his life
Drug Abuse
- marijuana: younger students
- alcohol: twelfth graders
- inhalants: cheap and available
* scare tactics like DARE drug prevention program might be ineffective because it encourages curiosity
and experimentation
* disengagement from school and poor teacher-student relations —> possible drug use
Mental Retardation —> Intellectual Disability
- disability characterized by significant limitations in both intellectiual functioning and adaptive behavior
- originates before age 18
- IQ test is below 70 is an indicator but must be paired with other problems with adaptive bahvior, day-to-
day independent living, and social functioning
2. Limited
- consistent support, but time-limited like employee training
3. Extensive
- daily care
4. Pervasive
- constant, high-intesitivty care for all aspects of living
Transition Programming
- preparing student to live and work in community
Students with Health and Sensory Impairments
- damage to brain before or during birth / infancy = diffculty coordinating body movements
> cerebral palsy: spasticity (overly tight / tense muscles) + secondary handicaps like visual
impairments, speech problems and mild-severe intellectual disabilities
Seizures
- cluster of behaviors that occur in response to abnormal neurochemical activities in the brain
1. Focal Seizures
- from one area of the brain
- conscious and experience sudden feeling of emotion or sensations
- OR dreamlike state and display repeated movements such as twitching for a short time
3. Absence Seizures
- “petit mal” before
- generalized seizures involving both sides of brain
- can easily go undetected
- not dramatic— just loses contact for 1-30 secs.
OTHERS
- asthma: chronic lung condition affecting 7M children
- sickle cell disease: inherited disorder in African American students and Greek / Italian heritage that
include tiredness, mild-severe pain, repeated infections, and kidney failure
- type 2 diabetes: chronic disease that affecs the way the body metabolizes sugar and may damage
almost every major organ in the body
Students with Vision Impairments
- low vision: can read with aid of a magnifying glass, large-print books or other aids / Braille
- legally blind: visual acuity of 20/200 or less after correction
Students who are Deaf
- hearing impaired —> deaf / hard of hearing
- capital D in Deaf community: group of people who want to be recognized as having own culture and
language
- goal: help deaf become bilingual and bicultural
> oral approaches: speech reading (lip reading) and training to use whatever limited
hearing they have
> manual approaches: sign language and finger spelling
Autism
- developmental disability significantly affecting verbal and nonverbal communication and social
interaction, evident before age 3, affects educational performance
Asperger Syndrome
- disability included in autism spectrum
- fixations and restricted interests, trouble with social relations
- average-to-above-average intelligence
- replaced with “high functioning autism spectrum disorder”
TIER 1
- schoolwide, grade-level, high-quality research based academic and behavioral instruction
- for 75%-80% of students
TIER 2
- targeted supplemental instruction
- 3-4 times a week for 30 mins.
- for 15%-20% of students who do not achieve as hoped in Tier 1
TIER 3
- intensive interventions
- 5 times a week for 45 mins. per session
- small groups or 1-to-1
- for 5%-10% students
Giftedness
- above-average general ability, high level of creativity and high level of task commitment / motivation
- learn quickly with little effort
- original, extremely advanced for age
- deep and prolonged practice is necessary
Case Study
- gathers many kinds of info about the student in different contexts
- best for recognizing artistic talent
Enrichment
- giving students additional, more thought-provoking work but keeping the with their age-mates in school
> curriculum compacting: assessing students’ knowledge of material in the
instructional unit, then teaching only for those goals not yet reached
Teaching for Gifted Students
- encourage abstract thinking
- creativity
- reading of high-level and original texts
- independence
CLEAR Model
Continual Formative Assessment
Clear Learning Goals
Data-Drived Learning Experiences
Authentic Products
Rich Curriculum