Intellectual Disability - Summary
Intellectual Disability - Summary
Intellectual Disability - Summary
Intellectual disability involves problems with general mental abilities that affect
functioning in two areas:
intellectual functioning (such as learning, problem solving, judgement)
adaptive functioning (activities of daily life such as communication and
independent living)
tend to develop social and communication skills during the preschool years (0-5
years) and have minimal impairment in sensory-motor areas
speech and language delay, low self-esteem, low levels of concentration and
underdeveloped social skills
difficulty in acquiring basic literacy and numeracy skills and in understanding
concepts
Specific Phobia
persistent worry on certain situations, activities or objects leading to their avoidance and
can bring about distress and disruption of social relationships
unreasonable fear of social situations or performance situations
Selective Mutism
persistent failure to speak in specific social situations where speaking is expected
excessive shyness, fear of embarrassment, social isolation and withdrawal, clinging,
temper tantrums, or controlling or oppositional behavior.
differences in brain development and brain activity that affect attention, the ability
to sit still, and self-control
most common neurodevelopmental disorders of childhood
trouble paying attention, controlling impulsive behaviors (may act without thinking
about what the result will be), or be overly active
impairs a child’s ability to concentrate and be less active when situations
generally require it
COMMUNICATION DISORDER: GRAMMAR AND COMPREHENSION
AUTISM
READING DISORDER
reading achievement being substantially below what is expected given the child’s age,
measured intelligence and education
hinders academic achievement of daily living activities requiring reading skills
silent reading tends to be slow and involve comprehension errors
developmental delays in language may occur in association with reading disorder