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Language and Learning Disabilities in Children

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Question
Answer
List and Define 3 types of nonverbal social behaviors   Facial Expressions, Gestures and Eye gaze  
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List 3 examples of higher order cognition   Problem solving, Critical thinking, Brainstorming  
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What is scaffolding?   Scaffolding is an instructional technique whereby the teacher models the desired learning strategy or task, then gradually shifts responsibility to the students.  
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List 3 examples of intervention for temporal-sequential ordering   Graphic organizer, visual schedule, checklists  
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What are 2 interventions for discourse production/sentence form comprehension?   Proof reading & story re-tell  
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List different types of language   Receptive and Expressive  
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Students who don't use rehearsal strategies fail to _____________ ?   Subvocalize  
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This is the system of rules for combining units of meaning to convey specific ideas   Grammar  
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A child with spatial deficits will have difficulties with what 2 things?   Organization & Time management  
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What are the writing stages?   1. Imitation 2. Graphic Presentation 3. Progressive Incorporation 4. Automatization 5. Elaboration 6. Personalization  
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What is episodic memory?   It is the collection of past personal experiences that occurred at a particular time and place.  
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What is short term memory?   Holds info for short amount of time & sends info to long term memory for further use  
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An artist with poor handwriting will have good ____ but poor ____   Good- Fine motor skills Bad- Graphomotor skills  
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What is used as an intervention strategy for social skills/cognition?   Role playing & social skills  
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Name a neuro-motor syndrome   Dysgraphia  
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___________ teach vocabulary and higher order cognition    
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For poor recall skills a teacher can tests using __________________   Multiple Choice Test  
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List 2 main categories of Reading   Decoding and Language Comprehension  
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Language that go beyond sentences are?   Discourse  
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Weak sentence formation is caused by?   Poor syntax skills  
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Strong sentence formation is caused by?    
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What is the primary goal of the SLP?   Advocate, increase language skills & improve overall communication  
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_______________ don't use figurative and pronominal ambiguity   Recurrent Themes  
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_______________ involves all constructs   Writing  
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List 3 accommodations to recommend to teachers   Preferential seating, preview, adjust rate & clarify  
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What are 3 components of demystification?   Infusion of optimism, destigmitization & work on strengths/weaknesses  
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What are 3 functions of attention?   Mental energy controls, processing controls, production controls  
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What is LIPS?   Lindenmood Bell Phonemic sequencing program  
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What are 2 types of phonemic awareness programs?   Ear-robics & Fast forward  
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What deficit does a leaky reader have?   Deficit in active working memory  
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Considering options before acting, thinking & then choosing the best strategy that would lead to the desired outcome is...   Facilitation and Inhibition  
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What are 3 parts of word analysis?   1. Phonology 2. Morphology 3. Context  
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What are the 7 elements of demystification?   Infusion of optimism, alliance formation, destigmatization, defining areas of strength, defining affinities, defining areas in need of improvement, presenting a management plan  
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Violation of canonical order is what?   First noun in a noun-verb-noun sequence need not be the actor (i.e.:The black dog was chased by the red fox)  
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What is violation of order of mention?   Order of actions in a sentence may not correspond to the actual order of events (Feed the dog after you wash your hands)  
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What is understanding subject parallel function?   A noun may be the subject of both clauses in a sentence ( the girl who borrowed the book showed it to her mother)  
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what is understanding object parallel function?   A noun may be the object of both clauses in a sentence (the teacher knows the boy who was chased by that dog)  
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What is violation of the minimal distance principle?   The noun closest to an infinitive does not have to be the object of that infinitive ( Mary promised Jane to buy the flowers)  
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What is pronomial ambiguity?   A pronoun does not always stand for a name in the same sentence (Jim thinks he is a fast runner)  
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What is the use of distal pronomial referents?   A pronoun may be remote from the noun it represents (jack was told to look for a toy among all the ones in the box and bring it inside)  
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Pragmatic Understanding is what?   The true intent of a sentence may not always parallel its literal interpretation (can you pass the beans?)  
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What is question comprehension?   There can be subtle differences between who what why when and which questions (when did you get angry vs why did you get angry?)  
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What is sentence ambiguity?   A sentence may have more than one possible interpretation (its too hot to eat)  
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What is figurative interpretation?   A sentence may not correspond to its most literal meaning (sandy saw the light)  
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What is inference drawing?   The interpretation of a sentence may have implicit meaning (there he goes again)  
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What is anaphora?   The meaning of a sentence may depend completely on one that preceded it (jake likes popcorn. susie loves it.)  
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What is cataphora?   The meaning of a sentence may depend completely on one that follows it. (Betsey had a great time. She loves to go to the movies)  
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What is an ellipsis?   A word needed for good grammatical construction may be omitted from a sentence or between sentences.  
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Linguistic Saliency determination is what?   There is a need to know what is most important or meaningful while processing discourse (summarizing, taking notes, studying for a test)  
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Extended discourse re-synthesis is what?   The beginning of discourse must be retained in active working memory while processing its ending (i.e. retelling a story narrative)  
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What is sensitivity to text structures?   Different paragraphs have specific organizational structures whose recognition facilitates processing (compare and contrast lists vs a list)  
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Weaving in the 7 elements of demystification in conversation will eventually build what?   Resiliency  
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What are the 3 domains of impact that attention control systems affect?   Cognition/academic performance, behavioral adaptation, social/interpersonal effectiveness  
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What are the three highly related attention controls?   Mental Energy controls, processing controls, production controls  
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What are mental energy controls?   In attention, they regulate the initial flow, allocation and maintenance of an energy supply necessary to foster alertness and facilitate the exertion of effort.  
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What are processing controls?   In attention, this is the regulation of intake of information as well as further interpretation  
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What are production controls?   They oversee the minds output  
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List the 4 parts of mental energy controls   alertness, mental effort, sleep/arousal balance, performance consistency  
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List the 5 parts of processing controls   saliency determination, depth/detail processing, cognitive activation, focal maintenance, satisfaction level  
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List the 5 parts of production controls   previewing, facilitation/inhibition, pacing, self monitoring, reinforceability  
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What is depth/detail processing?   Concentrate on incoming info to transfer to long term memory. don't process info they hear  
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what is cognitive activation?   passive processors  
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what is facilitation/inhibition?   think about their options and choose the best one  
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what is reinforceability?   Use previous experience to guide current behavior  
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What is temporal sequential ordering and what are the 6 functions of it?   The sequencing of data organization and integration throughout the cognitive process. Sequential awareness, sequential perception, sequential memory, sequential output, time management and higher sequential thinking  
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What is spatial ordering and what are the 6 functions of it?   Allows for the arrangement/organization of information in space. Spatial awareness, spatial perception, spatial memory, spatial output, material management, higher spatial thinking  
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What are the 3 parts of memory and describe each   Short term memory: info retained in the brain thats retrievable for a short period of time; active working memory: info held in the mind temporarily while working to understand ideas more fully; long term memory: permanent storage of knowledge, skills  
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What are the 3 parts of short term memory?   Saliency determination, recoding, depth/detail processing  
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What are the 4 parts of active working memory?   Idea maintenance, task completion maintenance, proximal/distal planning, short term to long term memory linkage  
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What are the 9 parts of long term memory?   consolidation, paired association storage, procedure storage, rule/pattern/schema storage, category storage, access, association, pattern recognition/method transfer. recall  
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What are the 3 parts of reading analysis?   1.phonological word analysis: segmenting words into phonemes 2. structural word analysis: using morphemes, prefixes, suffixes to help decode and increase knowledge of word meaning 3. contextual word analysis: context clues help derive word meaning  
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what are the 6 parts of writing?   Imitiation, graphic presentation, progressive incorporation, automatization, elaboration, personalization  
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What are the 3 neuromotor functions?   Gross motor, fine motor & graphomotor  
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What does graphomotor function invove?   Motor output of writing- previsualization, graphomotor memory, graphomotor production, feedback  
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What are the 2 functions of social cognition?   Verbal pragmatics and social behaviors  
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What does higher order cognition do?   Helps student integrate ideas/facts and solve complex problems  
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What are 5 different types of higher order cognition?   concept formation, critical thinking, creativity, brainstorming, problem solving, rule use, reasoning/logical thinking, mental representation  
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What are some other construct deficits that may impact reading negatively?   Attention deficits, visual processing weakness, language disabilities, memory deficiencies, higher order cognitive weakness  
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What are some management techniques for reading?   Read to kids daily, tailor teaching methods to individual, underlining, shorter sessions, previewing, drilling, flow charts  
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What are some management strategies for writing?   adjusting amount of writing, allocating extra time, setting priorities, brain storming, structured guidelines, semantic mapping,  
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What are some accommodations and modifications for graphomotor dysfunctions?   Optimum set up for writing, practice letters through tactile therapy, break up writing assignments into smaller tasks  
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What is code switching?   The ability to modify the way of speaking for different audiences  
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What is topic selection/maintenance?   the ability to know what to talk about/ when and how long to keep it up  
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What is humor regulation?   The ability to understand humor and use it appropriately  
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What is conversational technique?   The ability to engage in a two way discussion and share communication  
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What is self marketing?   Presenting oneself to peers in a socially acceptable way  
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What are some management techniques for social cognition?   Teach nonverbal cues, Role play, Examine consequences, use skits or short stories  
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What are some modifications for higher order cognition?   cognitive modeling, external guidance, overt self guidance  
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What is metacognition?   Thinking about the brains own processing/ examine own thinking process  
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What are some management techniques for memory?   Active recoding (making charts), summarizing, paraphrasing, subvocalizing, multi-modal learning, to do list  
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What are some management strategies for attention?   preferential seating, chunking, frequent breaks,regulate sleep cycle, paraphrasing, summarizing, underlining/circling, time limits,flowchart, previewing, time management, schedules  
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