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Jay Loftus; Cassandra Barber; Timothy Wilson; Michele Jacobsen – Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 2025
Time is often an accommodation used to ensure equity during assessments. The assumption is that the provision of additional time would help learners who require accommodations. In this study we examined 29 learners of differing spatial ability on visual learning tasks using static and dynamic digital images. The performance and time required to…
Descriptors: Spatial Ability, Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), Testing Accommodations, Visual Learning
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Pamela Luft; Charlotte Brochu – American Annals of the Deaf, 2023
Online learning environments are challenging for deaf and hard of hearing (DHH) individuals. A major concern is split attention, which occurs when one simultaneously attends to multiple stimuli, a situation that characterizes most multimedia presentations and instruction that combines sound, text, images, graphs or charts, and video. Needing to…
Descriptors: Fatigue (Biology), Visual Learning, Deafness, Electronic Learning
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Livingston, Sue – English Language Teaching, 2021
Based on theoretical findings from the literature on the integration of reading and writing pedagogies used with hearing postsecondary students to advance academic literacy, this article offers a model of instruction for achieving academic literacy in developmental and freshman composition courses composed of deaf students. Academic literacy is…
Descriptors: Academic Language, Deafness, Literacy, Teaching Methods
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Jelínková, Beáta – ICTE Journal, 2019
This paper reports on teaching/learning a foreign language of children having autistic spectrum disorders (ASD), particularly Highly functioning autism and Asperger's syndrome by virtue of help of ICT. The content includes theoretical background of the strengths and weaknesses of ASD students. It also includes research on four foreign language…
Descriptors: Second Language Instruction, Information Technology, Children, Autism
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Corbitt, William Keith – Dimension, 2017
Research on the acquisition of foreign languages by at-risk students has primarily focused on the Linguistic Coding Deficit Hypothesis (Horwitz, 2000). Recently, there has been a growing discussion regarding the effects of learning style rigidity (Castro, 2006; Castro and Peck, 2005; Corbitt, 2011; Sparks, 2006) and metacognitive awareness…
Descriptors: Metacognition, At Risk Students, Cognitive Style, Linguistic Theory
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Furniss, Gillian J. – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2007
In the United States, the likelihood that an art teacher may teach a child with autism in an inclusive classroom is high, since one out of every 166 children in the country is diagnosed with autism. Federal law mandates that every child has the right to a free and appropriate education. Some children with autism have exceptional artistic abilities…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Autism, Artists, Art Teachers
Cappiello, Samuel, Comp.; Quenin, Catherine, Comp. – PEPNet-Northeast, 2003
Cued Speech (CS) is a tool used to make spoken languages visible. While it uses the hands to communicate information visually, it is not a form of sign language. Signed languages are languages in their own right and use the hands, body, and face to present complete concepts rather than words. They have their own grammar systems and vocabularies.…
Descriptors: Cued Speech, Sign Language, Literacy, Communication Strategies