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Peer reviewedForness, Steven R.; And Others – American Journal of Mental Deficiency, 1979
Behavioral observations of 177 students in classrooms for educable mentally retarded children and for educationally handicapped children (mean ages 10 and 11 years) were compared to their achievement scores. (Author)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Arithmetic, Behavior Patterns, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedMcKnight, Jan C. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1979
The manual alphabet was used as an adjunct to a linguistic reading system to achieve the following goals with primary grade learning disabled children: (1) ensure attention, (2) reinforce the learning of phonemes, (3) guide the student if he had difficulties, (4) introduce prefixes and suffixes, and (5) provide the child with an independent…
Descriptors: Alphabets, Finger Spelling, Learning Disabilities, Manual Communication
Peer reviewedAllen, Jill I. – Teaching Exceptional Children, 1980
Jogging was used to modify disruptive behavior as part of the classroom routine for 12 learning disabled elementary-grade boys. The number of incidents of each of five negative behaviors were reduced by half following the 10-minute jogging routine. (SBH)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Behavior Problems, Classroom Techniques, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedGuttentag, Robert E. – Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1979
Twenty-two third-grade good and poor readers were tested for their ability to name pictures while trying to ignore words or nonword strings of letters printed inside the pictures. Both groups experienced more interference from intracategory than extracategory words, indicating that they processed the words automatically. Only the good readers…
Descriptors: Exceptional Child Research, Learning Disabilities, Pictorial Stimuli, Reading Difficulty
Townes, Brenda D.; And Others – Academic Therapy, 1979
The article describes the University of Washington's Parent/Child Learning Clinic, a parent based remediation program for children with learning disabilities. (DLS)
Descriptors: Family Environment, Home Instruction, Intervention, Learning Disabilities
Kaufman, Helen S.; Biren, Phillis L. – Academic Therapy, 1979
The article discusses the teaching of cursive writing to learning disabled and other handicapped children at an early age in conjunction with, and as an aid to, reading and spelling. A structured, logical, and sequential method of teaching cursive writing is presented, along with reinforcement and review procedures. (DLS)
Descriptors: Cursive Writing, Handwriting, Handwriting Skills, Learning Disabilities
Banas, Norma; Wills, I. H. – Academic Therapy, 1979
The article, the sixth in a series discussing specific tests of the Detroit Tests of Learning Aptitude (DTLA), deals with verbal opposites (word meanings in isolation) and verbal absurdities (word meanings in context). (DLS)
Descriptors: Diagnostic Teaching, Diagnostic Tests, Educational Diagnosis, Learning Disabilities
Peer reviewedGutkin, Terry B. – Psychology in the Schools, 1979
Investigated the measurement properties and practical utility of Bannatyne's recategorized WISC-R scores. Analyses of the scores of Caucasian learning disabled children indicated that, as a group, these students were characterized by the predicted Spatial-Conceptual-Sequential pattern. This was not found to be true for Mexican-American learning…
Descriptors: Children, Elementary Education, Intelligence Differences, Intelligence Tests
Peer reviewedFrankel, Fred; And Others – Psychology in the Schools, 1979
Teacher and child variables in a noncategorical program for early childhood education of retarded, autistic, seriously disturbed, learning disabled, and aphasic children were used to generate monthly computerized schedules of instruction. Schedules were generated over an eight-month period. Advantages and feasibility of such a scheduling system…
Descriptors: Computers, Elementary Secondary Education, Emotional Disturbances, Handicapped Children
Peer reviewedSwanson, H. Lee – Journal of Psychology, 1978
Tests the developmental memory lag hypothesis with 22 learning disabled boys on two- and three-dimensional nonverbal tasks. Finds age-equivalent recall patterns similar to those of normal children and consistent age-related differences in nonverbal recall, thereby negating the developmental lag hypothesis. (RL)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Developmental Stages, Disabilities, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedObrzut, John E. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1979
Dichotic listening and bisensory memory skills were investigated in 72 male middle-class second-grade and 72 fourth-grade readers who were classified according to the Boder system, which distinguishes among normal and three types of dyslexic readers: dysphonetic (auditory dyslexic), dyseidetic (visual dyslexic), and alexic (combined). (Author/SBH)
Descriptors: Auditory Stimuli, Dyslexia, Elementary Education, Exceptional Child Research
Peer reviewedMcLeod, John – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1979
The author argues against the accepted symptom of learning disabilities--a discrepancy between measured intelligence and measured educational achievement scores; and demonstrates that it is feasible to produce a quantitative definition of educational underachievement, and therefore to identify learning disabled students. (SBH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Diagnosis, Elementary Secondary Education, Identification
Peer reviewedNagle, Richard J.; Thwaite, Ben C. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1979
Thirty learning disabled third- and fourth-graders classified as impulsive on J. Kagan's Matching Familiar Figures Test were assigned to one of three training conditions in which they viewed a model who responded in either a reflective or impulsive cognitive tempo on a matching-to-sample task or a control model. (Author/SBH)
Descriptors: Behavior Change, Conceptual Tempo, Elementary Education, Exceptional Child Research
Peer reviewedHarris, Albert J. – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1979
Theory and research on the relation of lateral dominance to the causation of reading disability are reviewed. Both direct and indirect measures of cerebral hemisphere functioning are considered. (SBH)
Descriptors: Cerebral Dominance, Etiology, Evaluation Methods, Lateral Dominance
Peer reviewedPaal, Nicholaus; And Others – Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1979
The study was designed to determine not only the comparability of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children (WISC) and the WISC-Revised (WISC-R) with 40 minimal brain dysfunction children (6-10 years old), but also to determine whether well-established, clinically useful configurations emerge in the WISC-R as they do in the WISC. (Author/SBH)
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Exceptional Child Research, Intelligence Tests, Learning Disabilities


