Understanding Developmental and Learning Challenges - kapak
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Understanding Developmental and Learning Challenges

Explore intellectual disability, learning disabilities, autism spectrum disorder, and hearing impairment, covering causes, characteristics, diagnosis, and educational strategies.

iposJanuary 8, 2026 ~50 dk toplam
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Understanding Developmental and Learning Challenges

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  1. 1. What are the three main categories for classifying the causes of intellectual disability based on the time of occurrence?

    The causes of intellectual disability can be categorized as prenatal (before birth), perinatal (around birth), and postnatal (after birth).

  2. 2. Name two common perinatal causes of intellectual disability.

    Perinatal causes include preterm birth, post-term birth, birth trauma, and issues related to the placenta or umbilical cord.

  3. 3. What are the two main types of causes for intellectual disability when classified by their nature?

    Intellectual disability causes can be classified as structural, which includes genetic, metabolic, and chromosomal disorders, and acquired.

  4. 4. Explain the difference between dominant and recessive genetic disorders in the context of intellectual disability.

    Dominant genes express their effect even if present on only one chromosome, while recessive genes only manifest their effect when present on both chromosomes of a pair.

  5. 5. What is Galactosemia and how can its adverse effects be prevented?

    Galactosemia is a genetic disorder where the body cannot break down galactose. Early detection and a milk-free diet can prevent intellectual disability and other severe health issues.

  6. 6. Describe Genetic Microcephaly.

    Genetic Microcephaly involves improper brain development, leading to severe intellectual disability and a head size smaller than normal.

  7. 7. What is Hyperbilirubinemia and why is it common in newborns?

    Hyperbilirubinemia occurs when the liver struggles to process bilirubin, leading to jaundice. It's common in newborns because their liver is not fully developed, and they produce more bilirubin.

  8. 8. What is Down Syndrome and what causes it?

    Down Syndrome is a chromosomal disorder caused by an extra chromosome in the 21st pair, leading to physical growth retardation, a distinctive phenotype, and moderate intellectual disability.

  9. 9. List three cognitive characteristics often observed in children with intellectual disabilities.

    Cognitive characteristics include attention problems (sustained and selective), memory deficiencies, and issues with metacognitive skills and generalization.

  10. 10. How does intellectual disability typically affect language development?

    Children with intellectual disabilities may struggle with correct word pronunciation, have limited vocabularies, and may develop unique language patterns.

  11. 11. What is the primary goal of educational programs for individuals with intellectual disabilities?

    The primary goal is to prepare them for societal integration and enable them to live as independently as possible.

  12. 12. What is Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) and what is one of its core principles?

    ABA is an approach using operant conditioning principles to modify socially significant behaviors. A core principle is that behavior change depends on environmental changes.

  13. 13. According to the NJCLD, what are learning disabilities characterized by?

    Learning disabilities are characterized by difficulties in acquiring and using listening, speaking, reading, writing, reasoning, or mathematical skills, stemming from central nervous system dysfunctions.

  14. 14. What are the three main types of specific learning disabilities?

    The three main types are Dyslexia (reading difficulties), Dysgraphia (writing difficulties), and Dyscalculia (mathematics difficulties).

  15. 15. How is a learning disability typically diagnosed using the discrepancy criterion?

    Diagnosis involves comparing intelligence test scores with academic achievement test scores; a significant gap where intelligence is average or above, but achievement is lower, suggests a learning disability.

  16. 16. Describe the characteristics of a mild level learning disability.

    In a mild learning disability, academic skills lag behind peers, but students can progress with intensive support and adapt to the general curriculum without significant daily impairment.

  17. 17. What percentage of students receiving special education services are identified with learning disabilities?

    Children with learning disabilities constitute 50.5% of all students receiving special education services.

  18. 18. Name two potential causes of learning disabilities from the four categories mentioned.

    Potential causes include organic factors (differences in brain development), genetic factors (hereditary transmission), biochemical factors, and environmental factors (e.g., prenatal exposure to substances).

  19. 19. List two academic characteristics of students with learning disabilities.

    Academic characteristics include challenges in reading (e.g., decoding, comprehension) and writing (e.g., misspelled words, poor handwriting).

  20. 20. What are the three main components that characterize Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)?

    ASD is characterized by severe impairments in social communication and interaction, repetitive/stereotyped/restrictive behaviors, with symptoms typically appearing before age three.

  21. 21. Give an example of a social communication and interaction difficulty in ASD.

    Individuals with ASD may have deficits in social and emotional reciprocity, struggling with back-and-forth conversations or understanding emotions.

  22. 22. What is echolalia, and which characteristic of ASD does it fall under?

    Echolalia is the repetition of words or phrases multiple times, and it falls under stereotyped or repetitive motor movements, speech, or use of objects in ASD.

  23. 23. Describe Level 1 Autism Spectrum Disorder.

    Level 1 ASD requires support and is the mildest form, where individuals may have difficulties initiating social interactions, challenges with back-and-forth conversations, and resistance to routine changes.

  24. 24. What are two possible reasons for the significant increase in ASD prevalence over the last 30 years?

    Possible reasons include increased awareness among professionals and families, wider recognition of diagnostic criteria, and changes in diagnostic guidelines.

  25. 25. What role do genetic factors play in the causes of ASD?

    Genetic research indicates a hereditary component, with a higher likelihood if siblings or identical twins have ASD, and over 1,000 genes may contribute to the risk.

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What category of intellectual disability causes refers to factors occurring around the time of birth?

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This study material is compiled from various sources, including lecture audio transcripts, personal notes, and copy-pasted text. The content has been organized and structured to provide a comprehensive overview of developmental and learning challenges.


Comprehensive Study Guide: Developmental and Learning Challenges

📚 Introduction

This study guide offers an in-depth exploration of key developmental and learning challenges, including Intellectual Disability, Learning Disabilities, Autism Spectrum Disorder, and Hearing Impairment. It aims to provide a structured and academic understanding of each condition, covering definitions, causes, characteristics, diagnostic criteria, and educational approaches.


1. Intellectual Disability (ID)

Intellectual Disability is characterized by significant limitations in both intellectual functioning and adaptive behavior, which covers many everyday social and practical skills.

1.1. Causes of Intellectual Disability

Causes can be categorized by the time of occurrence and by type.

1.1.1. Causes by Time of Occurrence

Prenatal: Factors occurring before birth. ✅ Perinatal: Factors occurring around the time of birth. * Preterm birth * Post-term birth * Birth trauma * Problems related to the placenta or umbilical cord * Low birth weight ✅ Postnatal: Factors occurring after birth. * Infectious and febrile diseases * Traumas experienced * Diseases affecting the brain and nervous system

1.1.2. Causes by Type

Structural Causes: * Genetic Disorders: * Dominant Genes: Express their effect even if present on only one chromosome of a pair. * Neurofibromatosis * Tuberous Sclerosis * Recessive Genes: Express their effect only when present on both chromosomes of a pair. * Galactosemia * Tay-Sachs Disease * Phenylketonuria * Hunter Syndrome * Hurler Syndrome * Genetic Microcephaly * Sanfilippo Syndrome * Rett Syndrome * Cornelia de Lange Syndrome * Rubinstein-Taybi Syndrome * Metabolic Disorders: Can be congenital or acquired, involving both environmental and genetic factors. * Can lead to conditions like heart disease, diabetes, hypertension. * Chromosomal Disorders: Abnormalities in chromosome number (too few or too many) or structural changes. * Deletion * Microdeletion * Translocation * Inversion * Duplication * Ring chromosome ✅ Acquired Causes: Factors that develop after conception.

1.1.3. Specific Examples of Causes

  • Galactosemia:
    • Develops when the body cannot break down galactose (a sugar molecule found in milk).
    • Accumulation can cause intellectual disability, liver and kidney diseases, and cataracts.
    • 💡 Prevention: Early detection (before 4 months) and a milk-free diet can prevent adverse effects.
    • First Symptoms: Vomiting, weakness, jaundice, failure to gain weight.
  • Genetic Microcephaly:
    • The brain fails to develop properly.
    • Results in severe intellectual disability.
    • The head appears smaller than normal.
  • Hyperbilirubinemia:
    • Occurs when the liver struggles to process bilirubin, leading to jaundice.
    • Causes in Newborns:
      • Immature liver cannot efficiently remove accumulated bilirubin.
      • More bilirubin is produced than the liver can break down.
      • A large portion of bilirubin secreted into the intestines is reabsorbed.
    • Bilirubin is a yellow byproduct of hemoglobin from dying red blood cells, which are abundant in newborns.
  • Down Syndrome:
    • A genetic condition caused by the presence of an extra chromosome in the 21st chromosome pair.
    • Characterized by physical growth retardation, a distinctive phenotype, and moderate intellectual disability.
    • Features: Almond-shaped eyes, low muscle tone, a single crease in the palm, a tongue that appears large for the mouth, and congenital heart defects.
    • Detection: Can be detected through routine prenatal screening and diagnostic tests.

1.2. Characteristics of Children with Intellectual Disabilities

Children with ID exhibit a range of characteristics across different developmental domains.

1.2.1. Cognitive Characteristics

  • Attention Problems: Difficulties with both sustained attention (maintaining focus over time) and selective attention (focusing on relevant stimuli).
  • Memory Deficiencies: Worsen with the severity of the disability.
  • Metacognitive Skill Problems: Difficulties in understanding and regulating their own learning processes.
  • Generalization Problems: Struggling to apply learned skills to new situations or environments.
  • Motivation and Emotional Control: Challenges in self-motivation and regulating emotions.

1.2.2. Language Characteristics

  • Articulation Problems: Difficulties with correct word pronunciation.
  • Limited Vocabulary: Insufficient word knowledge.
  • Communication Challenges: Impact on forming relationships, understanding others, learning to read and write, and expressing emotions and thoughts.
  • Unique Language Patterns: May develop their own distinct ways of communicating.

1.2.3. Physical Health Characteristics

  • Motor Development Limitations: Weaker than typically developing peers in:
    • Endurance
    • Strength
    • Speed
    • Balance
    • Mobility
    • Dexterity
    • Hand-eye coordination
  • 💡 Intervention: With appropriate programs, these motor skills can be acquired and demonstrated.
  • Common Health Issues:
    • Epilepsy (seizure disorder)
    • Cerebral Palsy (CP)
    • Vision and/or hearing impairments
    • Ear problems
    • Lung and respiratory conditions
    • Heart conditions
    • Obesity
    • Thyroid disorders (goiter)
    • Feeding and swallowing difficulties
    • Gastrointestinal problems
    • Dental problems
    • Bone and joint problems
    • Psychological problems
    • Speech and language problems

1.3. Educational Approaches for Students with Intellectual Disabilities

1.3.1. Educational Goals

  • Primary Goal: Prepare individuals for societal integration and enable them to live as independently as possible.
  • Key Skill Areas:
    1. Personal care and development
    2. Home and community living
    3. Work and vocational skills
    4. Leisure time activities
    5. Travel skills

1.3.2. Instructional Methods

  • Fundamental Characteristics:
    1. They can learn like their peers.
    2. The disability affects all developmental areas.
  • Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA): A prominent approach since the 1960s, using principles of operant conditioning to modify socially significant behaviors.
    • Underpinnings:
      • Behavior change depends on environmental changes.
      • Observable behaviors are crucial.
      • Negative behaviors are also learned.
      • Reinforcement increases the likelihood of a behavior recurring.
    • Steps of ABA:
      1. Observe behaviors and identify those needing change.
      2. Analyze environmental factors influencing these behaviors.
      3. Implement strategies to teach targeted behaviors.
      4. Evaluate effectiveness and make necessary adjustments.

2. Learning Disabilities (LD)

Learning disabilities are neurodevelopmental disorders that affect how the brain processes information, leading to difficulties in specific academic skills despite average or above-average intelligence.

2.1. Definitions of Learning Disabilities

Various organizations provide definitions that emphasize specific academic challenges not attributable to other primary conditions.

  • National Joint Committee on Learning Disabilities (NJCLD) Definition:
    • A broad term encompassing a heterogeneous group of disorders.
    • Characterized by difficulties in acquiring and using listening, speaking, reading, writing, reasoning, or mathematical skills.
    • Presumed to stem from dysfunctions within the central nervous system.
    • Not caused by: Other disabilities (e.g., sensory impairments, intellectual disabilities) or environmental factors (e.g., cultural or socio-economic differences).
  • Individuals with Disabilities Education Improvement Act (IDEIA, 2004) Definition:
    • Involve difficulties in listening, thinking, speaking, reading, writing, and mathematical problem-solving.
    • Result from impairments in one or more essential cognitive processes necessary for understanding and using spoken or written language.
    • Does not include: Learning problems primarily caused by visual, hearing, or motor impairments; intellectual disability; emotional disturbance; or environmental, cultural, or economic disadvantage.
  • DSM-5 Definition: (Not detailed in provided text, but mentioned as a source)
  • Ministry of National Education (MoNE) Definition: (Not detailed in provided text, but mentioned as a source)

2.2. Core Diagnostic Components & Criteria

Diagnosis relies on identifying a discrepancy between intellectual ability and academic performance, ruling out other causes.

2.2.1. Core Diagnostic Components

  • Intelligence: Within the average or above-average range.
  • Academic Performance: Falls below expectations relative to intellectual potential.
  • Manifestation: Difficulties in understanding and using spoken language, listening, and speaking.
  • Origin: Irregular development or functioning of the central nervous system, affecting information processing and learning.
  • Impact: Academic domains are significantly impacted.
  • Exclusion: Difficulties cannot be attributed to other disabilities or environmental conditions.

2.2.2. Diagnostic Criteria

  1. Discrepancy between Ability and Achievement:
    • Most widely used criterion.
    • Compares scores from intelligence tests and academic achievement tests.
    • Diagnosis made when intelligence is average/above average, but academic achievement is significantly lower.
  2. Impairments in Basic Psychological Processes:
    • Evaluates cognitive abilities like sensory-motor skills, visual-auditory processing, attention, and memory for difficulties.
  3. Exclusion of Other Causes:
    • Factors such as intellectual disability, hearing/visual impairments, or environmental conditions must be ruled out as the primary cause.

2.3. Types of Learning Disabilities

LDs are categorized by the specific academic skill affected. A child may have one or multiple types.

  • Dyslexia (Reading Disability):
    • Difficulties in accurate word recognition.
    • Challenges in reading comprehension, reading speed, and fluency.
  • Dysgraphia (Written Expression Disability):
    • Difficulties in segmenting words into letters, writing, applying grammar rules, using punctuation correctly.
    • Challenges in producing clear and organized written work.
  • Dyscalculia (Mathematics Disability):
    • Difficulties in number sense.
    • Challenges in memorizing arithmetic rules, reasoning with numerical information.
    • Difficulties in performing calculations accurately and efficiently.

2.4. Classification by Severity Level

LDs can range from mild to severe, impacting the level of support required.

  • Mild Level Learning Disability:
    • Academic skills lag behind peers, but students can progress with intensive support.
    • Errors typically related to speed, attention, or minor strategy deficits.
    • With appropriate support, they can adapt to the general curriculum.
    • No significant impairment in daily functioning.
  • Moderate Level Learning Disability:
    • Significant and persistent difficulties in reading, writing, or mathematics.
    • Errors are repetitive, and students struggle to correct them independently.
    • Requires an Individualized Education Program (IEP).
    • Academic delays are more pronounced, but with effective special education, students can acquire independent life skills.
  • Severe Level Learning Disability:
    • Marked difficulties across fundamental academic domains (reading, writing, mathematics).
    • Academic progress may be very limited, requiring long-term and intensive special education.
    • Alternative instructional approaches become essential (e.g., functional academics, life skills instruction).
    • Independence in both academic and daily living areas is limited; continuous support is often required.

2.5. Prevalence of Learning Disabilities

📊 Statistics:

  • 50.5% of all students receiving special education services have learning disabilities.
  • More common in boys than girls.
  • According to DSM-5, occurs in 5-15% of school-age children and 4% of adults.
  • In the U.S., represents 39.2% of all special education students aged 6-21.
  • ⚠️ Important Note: Not all children with academic difficulties have an LD. Academic performance is influenced by many factors (teacher, environment, materials, classroom climate, etc.).

2.6. Causes of Learning Disabilities

While exact causes are not fully understood, they are generally related to brain functional processes.

  • Organic Factors: Differences occurring during brain development (e.g., structural or functional differences in brain organization, like the planum temporale).
  • Genetic Factors: Hereditary component; likelihood can be as high as 40% if present in parents or siblings.
  • Biochemical Factors: Deficiencies or excesses of certain biochemical substances can lead to abnormal neural responses and functional differences in brain activity.
  • Environmental Factors: Prenatal exposure to substances like alcohol, cigarettes, or drugs.
  • 💡 Key Point: Many potential causes exist, but none are definitively proven. Focus should be on supporting the child rather than solely on the cause.

2.7. Characteristics of Students with Learning Disabilities

Students with LD often exhibit difficulties across various domains.

2.7.1. Academic Skills

  • Reading (Dyslexia):
    • Persistent difficulties in letter recognition and decoding.
    • Challenges in reading comprehension, identifying main ideas, and making inferences.
  • Writing (Dysgraphia):
    • Often accompanies reading difficulties.
    • Errors such as misspelled words, reversed letters, and poor handwriting.
  • Mathematics (Dyscalculia):
    • Difficulties with arithmetic operations.
    • Weak number sense and understanding of numerical systems.

2.7.2. Memory, Cognitive, and Metacognitive Problems

  • Memory Problems:
    • Difficulties in processing information.
    • Challenges in reorganizing or integrating new information with prior knowledge.
  • Cognitive and Metacognitive Problems:
    • Difficulties with flexible thinking, problem-solving, and planning.
    • Limited awareness of their own thinking processes.
    • Struggles with self-monitoring, time management, and task organization.

2.7.3. Attention Deficits

  • Significant limitations in both selective attention and sustained attention compared to peers.
  • Approximately 51% of students with LD also have an ADHD diagnosis, experiencing attention difficulties, hyperactivity, or both.

2.7.4. Language Skills

  • Difficulties in the form, content, and use of language.
  • Challenges in understanding "what, where, why" questions.
  • Difficulty interpreting passive and negative sentence structures.
  • Difficulty understanding figurative language and words with multiple meanings (often due to weaknesses in abstract thinking).
  • Struggles with nonverbal language, initiating/maintaining conversations, and turn-taking.

2.7.5. Perception, Motor, and Coordination Skills

  • Perception: Ability to recognize stimuli through sight, hearing, or touch.
    • Difficulties recognizing and recalling visual shapes.
    • Challenges distinguishing words with similar sounds.
    • Difficulty following multi-step directions.
  • Motor and Coordination Problems:
    • Weaknesses in gross motor skills (e.g., throwing/catching a ball).
    • Difficulties in fine motor skills (e.g., using scissors, buttoning clothes).
    • Poor hand-eye coordination.

2.7.6. Generalization Problems

  • Struggle to transfer learned skills to different environments, people, or situations.
  • Difficulty applying similar skills across contexts.
  • 💡 Instructional Aim: Help students achieve independence in academic skills for better generalization.

2.7.7. Low Motivation

  • Often lose self-confidence.
  • May avoid expending effort due to repeated failures.
  • Frequently attribute success to luck, peers, or teacher assistance rather than their own abilities, hindering intrinsic motivation.

2.7.8. Social Skills

  • Learning disabilities may negatively affect:
    • Ability to form friendships.
    • Communication skills.
    • Approach to schoolwork.
  • Effective Improvement Methods: Direct instruction with adaptations, peer support, role-play, dramatization.
  • 💡 Teacher's Role: Crucial in reducing peer rejection through class-wide reinforcement and structured positive interactions.

2.8. Instructional Methods for Students with Learning Disabilities

Effective strategies involve adaptations across instruction, classroom environment, and assessment.

2.8.1. Instructional Adaptations

  • Break content into smaller, manageable parts.
  • Use concrete materials, visuals, and technology (tablets, smartboards).
  • Utilize multisensory instruction (visual, auditory, kinesthetic).
  • Provide extended time and instructional accommodations during exams and assignments.

2.8.2. Classroom Adaptations

  • Students should sit near the front to minimize distractions.
  • Provide additional explanations and repetitions.
  • Reduce distracting stimuli (e.g., noise, excessive visual materials).
  • Give students active roles during group activities.

2.8.3. Assessment Accommodations

  • Provide extended time during exams.
  • Focus on fewer questions prioritizing core skills.
  • Use alternative assessment methods (oral exams, projects, performance tasks).
  • Emphasize correct responses rather than mistakes.

2.8.4. Support in Reading

  • Before Reading:
    • Motivate the student.
    • Provide key vocabulary in advance.
    • Connect text with prior experiences.
    • Preview the text and examine its physical structure.
  • After Reading:
    • Highlight or underline difficult words.
    • Ask comprehension questions.
    • Have students summarize the main idea.
    • Encourage students to find and correct their own errors.
    • Direct attention to sections requiring inference-making.

2.8.5. Support in Math

  • Direct Instruction: Effective method. Teachers should model:
    • Reading the problem aloud.
    • Drawing pictures to aid comprehension.
    • Identifying important words or clues.
    • Performing mathematical operations.
    • Creating verbal cues or keywords.
  • Independent Practice: Gradually fade prompts and reinforce correct steps.

2.8.6. Using Graphic Organizers

  • Present information in a structured and visual format.
  • Steps for Effective Use:
    1. Identify the type of information to be taught.
    2. Determine the main ideas and relationships.
    3. Choose an appropriate graphic organizer.
    4. Create meaningful visual diagrams based on content.
    5. Prepare and present the graphic organizer.

3. Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD)

Autism Spectrum Disorder is a neurodevelopmental condition characterized by persistent deficits in social communication and social interaction, and restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, or activities. The term "spectrum" highlights the wide diversity in how ASD manifests.

3.1. Definition and Core Components

ASD is characterized by three main components, with symptoms typically appearing before age 3.

  1. Severe impairments in social communication and interaction.
  2. Repetitive, stereotyped, and restrictive behaviors.
  3. Symptoms typically appearing before the age of 3.

3.2. Social Communication and Interaction Difficulties

These are central to ASD and affect various aspects of social engagement.

  • Deficits in Social and Emotional Reciprocity:
    • Difficulties engaging in back-and-forth conversations.
    • Challenges expressing and understanding emotions.
    • Difficulties initiating social interactions.
  • Deficits in Nonverbal Communicative Behaviors:
    • Avoiding eye contact.
    • Difficulties using or interpreting body language, gestures, and facial expressions.
  • Difficulties in Developing, Maintaining, and Understanding Relationships:
    • Challenges behaving appropriately in social settings.
    • Difficulties forming or maintaining friendships.
    • Limited ability to engage in imaginative play.
    • Difficulty understanding figurative language.

3.3. Restricted and Repetitive Behaviors, Interests, and Activities

These patterns are a hallmark of ASD and can manifest in several ways.

  1. Stereotyped or Repetitive Motor Movements, Speech, or Use of Objects:
    • Motor Stereotypies: Repeating certain motor movements (e.g., hand flapping, spinning in circles).
    • Echolalia: Repeating words, phrases, or expressions multiple times.
    • Object Use: Lining up objects repetitively or spinning objects continuously.
  2. Insistence on Sameness, Inflexible Adherence to Routines, or Ritualized Behavior:
    • Extreme distress at changes in routines.
    • Preferring to play with the same toy every day.
    • Rigid ritualistic behaviors during meals or bedtime (e.g., always sitting in the same place, using the same spoon).
  3. Highly Restricted, Fixated Interests that are Unusually Intense or Focused:
    • Strong interest in topics not typically preferred by peers (e.g., airplanes, detergents).
    • Possessing highly detailed knowledge about such interests (e.g., aircraft length, fuel capacity, first flight date).
  4. Hyper- or Hyporeactivity to Sensory Input, or Unusual Interest in Sensory Aspects of the Environment:
    • Hyperreactivity: Overly sensitive to sounds or smells unnoticed by others.
    • Hyporeactivity: Showing no reaction to pain.
    • Unusual Interest: Excessive fascination with lights or moving objects.

3.4. Classification by Support Level

ASD is classified into three levels based on the amount of support an individual requires.

  • 1️⃣ Level 1 - Requiring Support (Mildest Form):
    • Difficulties initiating social interactions.
    • Challenges with back-and-forth conversations.
    • Difficulties forming friendships.
    • Resistance to changes in routine.
    • Problems transitioning between activities.
  • 2️⃣ Level 2 - Requiring Substantial Support:
    • Needs more support to function than Level 1.
    • Significant impairments in social communication even with support.
    • Struggles to adapt to environmental changes.
    • Displays noticeable repetitive and restricted behaviors.
    • May react inappropriately to routine changes.
  • 3️⃣ Level 3 - Requiring Very Substantial Support (Most Challenging):
    • Requires constant and intensive support for daily functioning.
    • May use only a few understandable words and rarely initiate interactions.
    • Shows minimal response to social engagement attempts by others.
    • Exhibits highly frequent repetitive behaviors interfering with functioning.
    • Extreme difficulty adapting to any change in routine.

3.5. Prevalence of ASD

📈 Statistics:

  • Prevalence of ASD increased 700% in the last 30 years.
  • Possible Reasons for Increase:
    • Increased awareness among professionals and families.
    • Wider recognition of diagnostic criteria.
    • Changes in ASD diagnostic guidelines.
    • Socio-economic factors contributing to increased accessibility of treatment.

3.6. Possible Causes of ASD

Causes are generally grouped into genetic, brain structure, and environmental factors.

  • Genetic Factors:
    • Strong hereditary component.
    • If one sibling has ASD, the likelihood of another sibling having it is 3%-19%.
    • Dizygotic (fraternal) twins: Rate can reach 30%.
    • Monozygotic (identical) twins: Concordance rate rises to 70%-90%.
    • Recent studies suggest over 1,000 genes may contribute to ASD risk, but no single gene or set of genes has been identified as the direct cause.
  • Brain Structure Differences:
    • Differences in the central nervous system and brain structure.
    • Some children with ASD have larger-than-average brain volume, potentially increasing symptom severity.
    • Neuroimaging studies show differences such as:
      • A smaller-than-normal corpus callosum (connecting the two hemispheres).
      • A thicker cerebral cortex and cortical folds.
  • Environmental Factors:
    • Commonly Discussed (but NOT scientifically supported as causal): Food components (e.g., gluten, casein), vaccines (e.g., MMR), toxins (e.g., mercury, heavy metals, arsenic, lead).
    • Earlier Theories (NOT valid): Parental personality traits, parenting style, socioeconomic level.
    • Consistently Confirmed Familial Factor: Advanced parental age (mothers over 35, fathers over 40) have a slightly increased likelihood of having a child with ASD.

3.7. Characteristics of Individuals with ASD

The characteristics, behaviors, and needs of individuals with ASD vary widely, emphasizing the "spectrum" nature of the disorder. Every child presents a unique profile.

3.7.1. Sensory Characteristics (Sensory Processing Disorder)

Sensory Processing Disorder refers to difficulties in receiving, processing, and generating appropriate behavioral responses to sensory input.

  • Three Main Types of Sensory Processing Difficulties:
    1. Sensory Modulation Disorders: Difficulties in producing and maintaining appropriate responses to sensory stimuli (receiving input but struggling to produce meaningful output).
      • Sensory Overresponsivity (Hyperresponsivity): Reacts to sensory input with greater speed, intensity, or duration than typical.
        • Example: Overly aware of all classroom sounds (computer fan, projector hum, whispers), leading to distraction, protective/avoidant behaviors, sensory overload, or repetitive movements as coping.
      • Sensory Underresponsivity (Hyposensitivity): Appears indifferent or unresponsive to sensory input.
        • Example: Sluggishness, seeming "disconnected," delayed reactions to stimuli (e.g., not reacting to pain, not responding when called).
      • Sensory Seeking: Actively seeks excessive sensory input to increase alertness.
        • Example: Standing/moving instead of sitting, rocking on chair, enjoying fast movements, fidgeting, touching objects/people often, preferring items with constant sensory feedback.
    2. Sensory Discrimination Disorders: Difficulty interpreting sensory information, struggling to perceive similarities and differences between stimuli.
      • May involve visual, auditory, tactile (touch), proprioceptive (body position), vestibular (balance), taste/smell processing.
      • Examples of Difficulties: Buttoning pants without looking, finding items in a bag without vision, knowing how much force to use (throwing a ball, petting an animal), speaking at appropriate volume, missing certain sounds, following verbal instructions, identifying symbols in complex visuals, recognizing bladder fullness or hunger.
    3. Sensory-Based Motor Disorders: Motor difficulties due to the brain's trouble processing sensory information needed to guide movement (not muscle/joint/bone problems).
      • Postural Disorders: Difficulties in maintaining body posture, balance, and stability due to inadequate sensory processing.
      • Dyspraxia (Developmental Coordination Disorder): Challenges in planning, sequencing, and carrying out motor actions.
        • Examples: Difficulties dressing (planning steps), writing (motor planning), performing coordinated motor tasks. Leads to everyday functional challenges.

3.7.2. Academic Characteristics

  • Intelligence, Attention, and Memory: Play important roles in academic performance.
  • Intellectual Development:
    • Children with ASD may have average/above-average intelligence, or varying degrees of intellectual disability.
    • Level of intellectual functioning highly influences skills like reading, writing, and mathematics.

4. Hearing Impairment (HI)

Hearing impairment refers to a partial or complete loss of hearing sensitivity, impacting speech acquisition, language use, and communication.

4.1. Ear Structure and Hearing Pathways

Understanding the ear's structure helps explain how hearing loss occurs.

4.1.1. Ear Structure

  • Outer Ear: Consists of the pinna (collects sound waves) and the ear canal (directs sound to eardrum). Eardrum vibrates and transfers sound to the middle ear.
  • Middle Ear: Air-filled space behind the eardrum, containing three small bones (stirrup, anvil,…

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