An Introduction
There is no question that most
scholastic accomplishments are measured and defined through language-based
communication. Yet, it has been found that more than 65% of all communication is
actually conveyed nonverbally. We are all familiar with "non-verbal
communication," but few professionals have been specifically trained to look for
deficits in this area. Although intelligence measures are designed to evaluate
both the verbal and nonverbal aspects of intelligence, educators tend to ignore
evidence of nonverbal deficiencies in students. Or worse, they brand students
with nonverbal learning disabilities as "problem" children.
We are all aware of the important role
language plays in human learning. The competence of an individual, in our
present-day society, is most often judged by their verbal proficiencies. A
person who speaks eloquently and has a well-developed vocabulary tends to be
accorded more credibility than an individual who makes constant grammatical
errors and demonstrates a limited vocabulary. A student who has innate
difficulties reading, spelling, and/or expressing herself stands out in most
classroom situations. And likewise, a student who is a top reader, achieves
excellent spelling scores, and expresses herself articulately usually does not
prompt her teacher to consider a learning disorder. But, this is often exactly
the presentation a child with nonverbal learning disabilities (NLD) syndrome
manifests in the early elementary grades.
Nonverbal learning disorders (also
called "right-hemisphere learning disorders") often go unrecognized and unaided
by teachers and other professionals for a large part of a child's schooling.
Overall, there has been an inadequate awareness of the underlying causes for the
difficulties these students encounter in school. There are currently few
resources available for the child with NLD syndrome through schools or private
agencies. It is still difficult to find a professional who understands nonverbal
learning disabilities. These children are often labeled "behavior problems" or
"emotionally disturbed" because of their frequent inappropriate and unexpected
conduct, but NLD is known to have a neurological rather than a deliberate and/or
an emotional origin.
The NLD syndrome reveals itself in
impaired abilities to organize the visual-spatial field, adapt to new or novel
situations, and/or accurately read nonverbal signals and cues. It appears to be
the reverse syndrome of dyslexia. Although academic progress is made, such a
student will have difficulty "producing" in situations where speed and
adaptability are required. Whereas language-based learning disorders have been
shown to be genetic in origin, heredity has not, as yet, been linked to NLD. It
is known that nonverbal learning disabilities involve the performance processes
(generally thought of neurologically as originating in the right cerebral
hemisphere of the brain, which specializes in nonverbal processing).
Brain scans of individuals with NLD
often confirm mild abnormalities of the right cerebral hemisphere. Developmental
histories have revealed that a number of the children suffering from nonverbal
learning disorders who have come to clinical attention have at some time early
in their development: (1) sustained a moderate to severe head injury, (2)
received repeated radiation treatments on or near their heads over a prolonged
period of time, (3) congenital absence of the corpus callosum, (4) been treated
for hydrocephalus, or (5) actually had brain tissue removed from their right
hemisphere.
All of these neurological insults
involve significant destruction of white matter (long myelinated fibers in the
brain) connections in the right hemisphere, which are important for intermodal
integration. Hence, current evidence and theories suggest that early damage
(disease, disorder, or dysfunction) of the right cerebral hemisphere and/or
diffuse white matter disease, which leaves the left hemisphere (unimodal) system
to function on its own, is the contributing cause of the NLD syndrome
(definitely not dysfunctional home lives). Clinically, this learning disorder
classification resembles an adult patient with a severe head injury to the right
cerebral hemisphere, both symptomatically and behaviorally.
Nonverbal learning disorders appear
much less frequently than language-based learning disorders. Whereas it is
approximated that about 10% of the general population could be found to have
identifiable learning disabilities, it is thought that only 1 to 10% of those
individuals would be found to have NLD (or between 1.0 to 0.1% of the general
population). Unlike language-based learning disabilities, the NLD syndrome
affects females as often as males (approximately 1:1 sex ratio) and incidence of
left-handedness is uncommon.
Even though NLD is, by definition, a
"low incidence disability," there are indications that, as school
assessment/intervention procedures improve, a higher proportion of children will
be identified with the NLD syndrome. The low rate of occurrence (as low as 1 out
of 1,000), is no excuse for the lack of identification and services victims of
this devastating impairment currently receive. The symptoms are distinct and
display themselves early in a child's development.
The discovery of the NLD syndrome began
in the early 1970s, with research involving groups of children with learning
disabilities identified by discrepancies between their verbal and performance
IQs. It is unfortunate that 25 years later, even professionals in the field of
education are largely uninformed about and/or unfamiliar with nonverbal learning
disorders as these disabilities can be much more devastating to a child than
language-based learning disorders in the long run.
Since diminished access to and/or
disordered functioning of the right-hemisphere systems impedes all understanding
and adaptive learning, it is fair to say (as Helmer R. Myklebust did in 1975)
that nonverbal learning disabilities "are more debilitating than verbal
disabilities." The specific central processing abilities and deficits that
characterize this syndrome are now well defined. Still, nonverbal learning
disorders remain predominantly misunderstood and largely go unrecognized.
A child's earliest mode of
communication should be nonverbal. Both parents and teachers will often suspect
that "something is amiss" early on, but they can't quite "put a finger on it."
Three categories of dysfunction present themselves: (1) motoric (lack of
coordination, severe balance problems and/or difficulties with fine graphomotor
skills), (2) visual-spatial-organizational (lack of image, poor visual recall,
faulty spatial perceptions, and/or difficulties with spatial relations), and (3)
social (lack of ability to comprehend nonverbal communication, difficulties
adjusting to transitions and novel situations, and/or significant deficits in
social judgment and social interaction).
Early consultation with a school
psychologist or family physician typically only serves to dismiss or minimize a
teacher's or parent's worries about this child. More often than not, parents are
assured that everything is fine; perhaps their child is "just a perfectionist"
or "immature" or "bored with the way things are normally done" or "a bit
clumsy." Rarely are a parent's or teacher's concerns given any credence until
the child reaches a point in school where he is no longer able to function given
the limitations of his disability and/or, in some cases, the child suffers a
"nervous breakdown" (or worse).
The child with nonverbal learning
disorders commonly appears awkward and is, in fact, inadequately coordinated in
both fine and gross motor skills. She may have had extreme difficulty learning
to ride a bike or to kick a soccer ball. Fine motor skills, such as cutting with
scissors or tying shoe laces, seem to be impossible for this child to master.
She "talks her way through" even simple motor activities. A young child with NLD
is less likely to explore her environment motorically because she cannot rely
upon her kinesthetic processing and spatial perceptions. This child learns
little from experience or repetition and is unable to generalize information.
In the early years, such a child may
appear "confused" much of the time (he is confused) despite a high intelligence
and high scores on receptive and expressive language measures. Closer
observation will reveal a social ineptness brought about by misinterpretations
of body language and/or tone of voice. This child is unable to "look and learn."
He does not perceive subtle cues in his environment such as: when something has
gone far enough; the idea of personal "space"; the facial expressions of others;
or when another person is registering pleasure (or displeasure) in a nonverbal
mode.
These are all social "skills" that are
normally grasped intuitively through observation, not directly taught. If a
child is constantly admonished with the words, "I shouldn't have to tell you
this!," this should alert everyone that something is awry because you do have to
tell them (everything). The child's verbal processing may be proficient, but it
can be impossible for her to receive and comprehend nonverbal information. Such
a child will cope by relying upon language as her principal means of social
relating, information gathering, and relief from anxiety. As a result, she is
constantly being told, "You talk too much!"
The child with NLD often develops an
exceptional memory for rote material; a coping skill he has had to hone in order
to survive. Since the nonverbal processing area of his brain is not giving him
the needed automatic feedback, he relies solely upon his memory of past
experiences, each of which he has labeled verbally, to guide him in future
situations. This, of course, is less effective and less reliable than being able
to sense and interpret another person's social cues (because of the vast array
of differences in human nature).
Cumbersome monologues are another trait
of a child with nonverbal learning disabilities. Normal conversational "give and
take" seem to elude her. Teachers complain of a child who "talks incessantly"
and parents resolve, "She just doesn't seem to know when to be quiet!" Owing to
visual-spatial disturbances, it is difficult for this child to change from one
activity to another and/or to move from one place to another. A child with NLD
uses all of her concentration and attention to merely get through a room.
Imagine the frustration produced when attempting to function in a complicated
and/or new social situation. Owing to her inability to "handle" such
informational processing demands, she will instinctively avoid any kind of
novelty.
The importance of identifying and
servicing children with nonverbal learning disorders is especially acute.
Overestimates of the child's abilities and unrealistic demands made by parents
and teachers can lead to ongoing emotional problems. A favorable prognosis seems
to depend upon early identification and accommodation. The child with NLD is
particularly inclined toward seriously debilitating forms of internalizing
psychopathology, such as depression, withdrawal, anxiety, and in some cases,
suicide.
Dr. Byron P. Rourke of the University
of Windsor and his associates have found that nonverbal learning disabilities
"predispose those afflicted to adolescent and adult depression and suicide
risk." The child with NLD is regularly punished and picked on for circumstances
he cannot help, without ever really understanding why, and he is in turn often
left with little hope that his situation will ever improve. After amassing years
of embarrassing and misconceived unintentional social blunders, it is not too
difficult to comprehend how a person with nonverbal learning disorders could
come to the conclusion that his environment is not structured to accommodate
him.
Identifying Nonverbal Learning Disorders
Whereas language-based disabilities are
usually readily apparent to parents and educators, nonverbal learning disorders
routinely go unrecognized. Many of the early symptoms of nonverbal learning
disabilities instill pride, rather than alarm, in parents and teachers who
ordinarily applaud language-based accomplishments. This child is extremely
verbose and may "speak like an adult" at two or three years of age. During early
childhood, he is usually considered "gifted" by his parents and teachers.
Sometimes the child with NLD has a history of hyperlexia (rote reading at a very
young age). This child is generally an eager, enthusiastic learner who quickly
memorizes rote material, only serving to reinforce the notion of his precocity.
Extraordinary early speech and
vocabulary development are not often suspected to be a coping strategy being
employed by a child who has a very deficient right-hemisphere system and limited
access to her nonverbal processing abilities. The child with NLD is also likely
to acquire an unusual aptitude for producing "phonetically accurate"
reproductions of words (spelling), but few adults will consider this to be a
reflection of her over-dependence upon auditory perceptions (as opposed to
visual or tactile). Likewise, remarkable rote memory skills, attention to
detail, and a natural facility for decoding, encoding, and early reading
development do not generally cause red flags to go up. Yet, these are some of
the important early indicators that a child is having difficulty relating to and
functioning in her world nonverbally, and a warning that she has developed an
excessive reliance upon her verbal strengths.
Dr. Rourke and his associates have
found that the dysfunctions associated with NLD are "less apparent at the age of
7 to 8 years . . . than at 10 to 14 years," and that they become "progressively
more apparent (and more debilitating) as adulthood approaches." Although this
child has a history of poor coordination and was probably slow to acquire motor
skills, typically initial academic concerns will generate from the fact that he
is not completing and/or turning in written assignments during his late
elementary school years. This child produces limited written output and the
process is always slow and laborious for him.
When the skills for organizing and
developing written work don't advance at the expected rate for this student,
finally the red flags go up. However, by this time, the child may have already
"shut down" or become locked into an oppositional struggle, as a coping
mechanism to deal with the academic pressures and performance demands which have
been placed upon him by unsuspecting parents and teachers and which he is unable
to meet.
The three broad aspects of development
in which NLD presents deviations and abnormalities are (1) motoric, (2)
visual-spatial-organizational, and (3) social. If a child has right hemispheric
dysfunction, deficits in these areas should be quite evident to an observer
during the child's early years, despite his valiant efforts to compensate for
them. The more novel the psychomotor, visual-spatial, and/or social situation,
the more evident his impairments will be. Following are some of the early
adjustment problems to be aware of in each category.
Motoric:
This child generally has a history of
poor psycho-motor coordination. Motor clumsiness is often the first concern his
parents observe. There may be a recognizable difference between the dominant and
non-dominant sides of the body with more noticeable problems on the left side of
the body. He will avoid crossing his body midline. Later, in school, he may
exhibit problems with dysgraphia and impaired tactile-discrimination abilities,
including finger agnosia.
His lack of motor control can manifest
in social rejection, as this child is constantly "getting in the way," bumping
into other people and objects, and is generally unaware of the position in space
his body encompasses. In addition to social ostracism, his motor disabilities
(along with spatial misconceptions) put him at an increased risk for personal
injury.
As a toddler, she will be hesitate to
explore her environment motorically, instead she explores the world verbally by
asking questions and receiving verbal answers to her questions about the
environment. Extreme vacillations with balance are often first evident when the
child is learning to walk. She may appear "drunk" in her early attempts at
walking. An unusual amount of falling will cause this child to be reluctant and
to cling to objects and/or a parent's hand to gain stabilization long after this
would normally be expected. She may also have a fear of heights and avoid
climbing up on the jungle gym. It is believed that because of these
deficiencies, this child receives little benefit from the sensorimotor period of
development, which consequently hinders her development of higher-order concept
formation and problem-solving abilities.
Often, when the toddler with nonverbal
learning disorders is set down after being held, it takes several seconds for
him to cognitively secure his equilibrium. As this function of the central
nervous system is not integrated for him through the right hemisphere, his body
will not automatically resume a position of balance. The child must "remember" a
previous experience of equilibrium and restructure that memory cognitively to
achieve a position of bodily balance. His everyday experience is similar to the
unbalanced sensation a well-integrated adult encounters when stepping off of a
boat onto "solid" land after a time at sea.
These faulty balance perceptions will
make learning to ride a bike laborious beyond belief. A child with NLD takes
years, not days or weeks to conquer riding a two-wheel bicycle unaided. At the
dinner table or (upon entering a school situation) at a desk, this child needs
to muster an extraordinary amount of determination to remain seated in her
chair. And, as soon as she diverts her attention to the task at hand (i.e.
eating or school work), the cognitively maintained balance is gone, and over she
topples. This child naturally prefers to eat and do school assignments on the
floor, where she senses more security and support.
Simple athletic skills cannot be
mastered in early childhood. When this child lifts his foot to kick a soccer
ball, while concentrating on the ball rather than his balance, he will
subsequently lose (forget) his balance and tumble over. When jumping up to shoot
a basket, he cannot land solidly on his feet. When attempting to do
"jumping-jacks," it is impossible to coordinate the two sides of his body. The
ridicule suffered by this child is catastrophic, even at the hands of possibly
well-meaning "coaches" and P.E. teachers.
Fine motor skills are also impacted.
The NLD toddler resists eating with a spoon or fork owing to the lack of
dexterity in his fingers. Learning to tie her shoe laces can take years and she
will have to "talk herself through" the process well into adolescence and
beyond. Using scissors can be a difficult to hopeless task, as is holding a
pencil correctly. This child will adapt a "static tripod" pencil grip and press
very deeply in an attempt to control her writing, often producing dark, heavy
lines.
It has been said that such a child
always "draws" and never actually learns to "write" (it's not too difficult to
imagine the consequences this causes in school). The child with NLD's
handwriting may be quite neat, but the process remains slow and arduous for him.
His daily experience with fine motor skills has been likened to an adult who,
after a stroke or being prescribed a muscle relaxant, have extreme difficulty
controlling their handwriting.
Visual-Spatial-Organizational:
Problems with spatial perceptions;
spatial relations; recognition, organization, and synthesis of visual-spatial
information; discrimination and recognition of visual detail and visual
relation-ships, visual-spatial orientation (including right-left orientation
problems); visual memories, coordination of visual input with the motoric
processes (visual-motor integration); visual form constancy; gestalt
impressions; and concept formation are rooted in basic deficits in visual
perception and visual imagery. This child does not form visual images and
therefore cannot revisualize something he has seen previously. He focuses on the
details of what he sees and often fails to grasp the "total picture."
Visual-spatial confusion underlies many
of the unusual behaviors which are evident in a young child with nonverbal
learning disorders. This child will endeavor to "bind" to an adult, through
continuous dialog, in order to stabilize her position in a room. She needs to
"verbally" (albeit subconsciously) label everything that happens around her, in
order to memorize and try to comprehend the everyday circumstances which others
instantly and effortlessly recognize and assimilate. Experiences are stored in
her memory by their verbal labels, not by visual images or by propreoceptive
recall. She will have a relatively poor memory for novel and/or complex material
and/or material which is not easily verbally coded.
The child with NLD must employ intense
forethought to label everything he comes into contact with in his environment.
Owing to faulty perceptions, these labels may be incorrect, but the child
perseveres because this is his only accessible means of processing the
information. He does not form the visual images which help the rest of us to
recognize and comprehend something we've seen or a place we've been before. This
causes extreme difficulty for him in trying to find his way in new places.
Spatial reference is often neglected
entirely (i.e., the child may recall many distinct details of a house she has
just visited, but she will not be able to describe its location in reference to
other houses on the same block and/or to her own home; she cannot conceptualize
the details she has memorized in an integrated fashion to form a holistic view).
This child, naturally, is not drawn to building or construction toys. Once in
school, she will have difficulty figuring out where and how to place written
responses on a sheet of paper and/or how to get back to her classroom from the
nurses' office. Specific problems in arithmetic can result from deficits in
visual-spatial reasoning and visual perception. She will commonly have problems
aligning columns of numbers, observing directionality, and in organizing her
work.
The child with nonverbal learning
disorders constantly "talks himself through" situations as a means of verbally
compensating for his motoric and visual-spatial deficiencies. Although he may be
unaware of the spatial position his house occupies in the neighborhood, he will
find his way back from a friends house by counting homes which come in between,
labeling environmental markers, and/or recounting a sequence of details which he
has taken pains to label and commit to verbal memory.
Such a child is able to achieve a
limited degree of comfort in her environment through well-developed rote memory
skills. This coping technique, however, breaks down whenever the child
encounters novel or highly complex situations. She is conditioned to prefer
predictable situations in which she has had some previous success. Tossing in a
new variable to an already fairly constant situation (such as a substitute
teacher taking over the control of a classroom where the child has previously
gained a certain degree of stability with his regular teacher) can totally
disrupt this child's coping strategies and generate an increased level of
anxiety for her.
Along with the aforementioned
graphomotor and pencil grip problems, the child with nonverbal learning
disorders may have difficulty remembering the shapes of letters (visual memory)
and using the correct sequence of strokes to form letters (visual-sequential
memory). He will have difficulty with the concept of visual form constancy; the
ability to perceive that an object possesses unchanging properties, such as
specific shape, position, and size, in various representations of its image. All
writing tasks will be slow and arduous. Copying accurately from the board or a
book are impractical and agonizing for this child.
Social:
Deficits in social awareness and social
judgment, though the child is struggling to fit in and her actions are certainly
not deliberate, will often be misinterpreted as "annoying" or "attention
getting" behavior by adults and peers alike. It is clear that these students are
motivated to conform and adapt socially, but sadly, they perceive and interpret
social situations inaccurately. The blunders committed are usually not flagrant
in nature, but rather incessant and tenacious; hence the label "annoying."
Social competence disabilities are an integral component of the NLD syndrome and
this aspect of the impairment may lead to an overdependence upon adults
(especially parents).
The social indiscretions frequently
committed by the child with NLD are representational of his inability to discern
and/or process perceptual cues in communication. The aforementioned
visual-spatial-organizational deficits cause him to be ineffective at
recognizing faces, interpreting gestures, deciphering postural clues, and
"reading" facial expressions. Conventions governing physical proximity and
distance are also not perceived. Changes in tone and/or pitch of voice and/or
emphasis of delivery are not noticed or distinguished. Likewise, this child will
not appropriately alter his expression and elocution in speech. This can be
evidenced in what may appear to be terse or curt response styles.
The importance of nonverbal signals and
cues was noted previously. It has been shown that more than 65% of the intent of
an average conversation is conveyed nonverbally. However, the child with
nonverbal learning disorders will try to resolve all quandaries by employing her
strong verbal skills. She has to piece together the meaning of a conversation or
directive from this approximately 35% (verbal) that she actually receives and
processes. She totally "misses" the large amount (majority) of relevant content
which is being conveyed nonverbally and, as a result, much of her conversational
responses don't "fit" with the tone and mood of the occasion. This child is
likely to become withdrawn in novel social situations and/or to appear "out of
place."
The impairments of NLD also lead to a
preponderance of very literal translations which, in turn, precede continuous
misjudgments and misinterpretations. The child with NLD is naively trusting of
others (to a fault) and does not embrace the concept of dishonesty (even in
terms of white lies) or withholding (even inflammatory) information. He also
will not recognize when he is being lied to or deceived by others. Deceit,
cunning, and/or manipulation are beyond this child's scope of assimilation. He
assumes that everyone is friendly who displays that front verbally and that the
intentions of others are only that which they expose verbally. This inability to
"read" the intentions of others often results in a lot of unfortunate
"scapegoating" of this child. He needs to be taught to question the motives of
others - he won't learn from experience.
A child with nonverbal learning
disorders is very "concrete" in her translations, expression, and outlook of the
world. Her social relationships tend to be routinized and stereotyped.
Everything is seen in terms of black or white - true or false. "Hidden meanings"
have to be pointed out to her - they will not be intuitively detected or
conceived. She may be regarded as a "smart aleck" because of her constant
misinterpretations. This child is frequently reprimanded with the words, "You
knew what I meant!" when, of course, she didn't have a clue. She had no way to
access what was "meant," but not actually said.
Perceptual cues serve in the same
capacity as traffic signals; they govern the flow, give-and-take, and
fluctuations in our conversations. The child who cannot "read" these nonverbal
cues is frequently determined to be ill-mannered, discourteous, curt, immature,
lacking in respect for others, self-centered, and/or even defiant. This child is
none of the above. Like the color blind driver who cannot respond appropriately
to traffic lights, this is a child who is utilizing all of the resources
available to him in order to try and make sense of a world which is providing
him with faulty cues and unreliable information.
It is currently difficult to locate a
professional who understands nonverbal learning disorders, but such
professionals are out there. If a child exhibits the developmental deficiencies
described above, she can be helped to lead an easier, less troublesome life. An
effective remedial approach incorporates constantly and explicitly "spelling
out" to this child what other children would be able to pick-up or infer
intuitively with a strong verbal component because this is the only way the
child will process and assimilate accurate observations of her environment.
Appropriate accommodations will have to be made by the family and the school
staff working with this child to lessen the likelihood of shattering
consequences resulting from the disability. Professionals in the field of
Special Education must hone their diagnostic skills in order to identify and
provide services for NLD students at an earlier age.
Servicing Nonverbal Learning Disorders
Nonverbal learning disorders are often
overlooked educationally because the student is, as a means of compensating,
very verbal. He has a highly developed memory for rote verbal information so
early reading and spelling skills usually constitute a strong domain. If you
observe all, or most, of the early adjustment problems detailed earlier in this
article, an intelligence screening may support your suspicions. An IQ measure,
such as the WISC-III, which reveals a performance IQ (PIQ) scale score depressed
(by 10 - 15 points or more) relative to the student's verbal IQ (VIQ) score,
denotes a deficient right-hemisphere system.
It is not relevant to the diagnostic
process whether one or both of these scores is above the norm; the crucial
determinate is the relative discrepancy between the VIQ and PIQ. It is not
unusual for a child with nonverbal learning disabilities to have a VIQ in the
very superior range. When subtest scores are grouped, the verbal
conceptualization cluster will generally be the strongest for the child with NLD
while the spatial cluster will be the weakest.
Depending upon the severity of the
disorder, and also upon the child's intelligence and the coping techniques which
she has already put into place, the discrepancy can be 20 points or more. This
is severe and warrants immediate attention no matter what the child's full-scale
IQ (FSIQ). You are not merely discovering that the child has a dominance of the
left cerebral hemisphere, but rather that she is having difficulty accessing the
processes specialized in the right cerebral hemisphere. A 10-point discrepancy
is generally considered significant.
Once a child has been diagnosed,
parents should not accept the rationale of some well-meaning professionals who
may tell them that NLD will play a minor role in their child's ability to
perform well in school. Physicians and psychologists may assume that a child
with superior expressive language skills can easily compensate for a deficit in
nonverbal skills. This assumption is true only in relation to the child's
capacity to "parrot" back school work in the early grades and does not address
the child's inability to "flow through life."
As the child moves into the higher
grades, where less and less will be "spelled out" for him, he will reach a point
where functioning in school is impossible without specific compensations,
accommodations, modifications, and strategies (CAMS). The incredible rote memory
which served this child very well in the lower grades, before he was asked to
interpret and evaluate information, fails him when academic demands shift to
more complex applications.
At this point he may cease to try or
"burn-out" attempting to succeed under the impossible demands now being placed
upon him. Recognizing this eventuality and employing interventions early in the
child's schooling is certainly preferable to waiting until junior or senior high
to accommodate his disability when he finally "bottoms out." Early
implementation of CAMS will maximize his success in school. Unless appropriate
CAMS are initiated during the elementary years, prognosis for success in school
is poor for this child.
A child with NLD is especially inclined
towards developing depression and/or anxiety disorders if the nonverbal learning
disorders are not recognized early and accommodated in a compassionate,
responsible, and supportive fashion. If the child is continually being told by
the adults around her, "You could do better, if you really tried," or, "You're
just not applying yourself" (both false observations in this case) her level of
frustration will naturally intensify and her self-image will plummet. It is not
unusual for the child with nonverbal learning disorders to become increasingly
isolated and withdrawn as failures in school multiply and intensify.
At this point, the child may be treated
for the secondary complaints which now overshadow the underlying primary
disorder of NLD. Misdiagnosis, or an incomplete diagnosis (many learning
disorders have a comorbid-morbid relation), will only serve to compound the
problems a child is experiencing. It is not uncommon for a child with nonverbal
learning disorders to be misdiagnosed with conditions such as Attention Deficit
Disorder (ADD) or emotional disturbance.
Even when a child has been correctly
diagnosed with NLD, it may still be difficult for him to receive the program
modifications and accommodations he needs in school. After all, he is probably
performing at or above grade level on most academic achievement tasks which are
routinely measured at school, especially during the early elementary years.
Although the deficits in motor, visual-spatial, and social skills may be obvious
to any interested and observant persons, these impairments will not necessarily
evoke the concern and/or compassion of any but the most caring of teachers.
If the "formula" for language-based
(specific) disabilities is called upon, parents may be told that their child
does not "qualify" for the Special Education services because there is not a
"severe discrepancy" between the child's intelligence and her achievement in the
academic areas. In fact, the child's level of accomplishment in academics may
even appear to go beyond her potential if the measurement techniques are largely
verbal (oral/written). "Overlearning" is common in individuals with the NLD
syndrome.
Nonverbal learning disorders constitute
a dysfunction in the basic cerebral processes and, as such, denote a disability
which warrants specialized support and program modifications for the student.
"Traumatic brain injury" was added to IDEA by the Education of the Handicapped
Act Amendments of 1990. Since this child's condition seriously interferes with
his ability to perform in school, an Individualized Education Program (IEP) can
and should be developed and implemented for this child. Or, since this child's
NLD impairments "substantially limit one or more major life activities," a 504
plan can be drawn up to help define appropriate accommodations for him.
This child will often have already been
mislabeled by unenlightened adults at her school. Today, thankfully, intelligent
parents are not so quick to accept educators' misguided declarations that their
child is "lazy," "purposefully disruptive," "a troublemaker," "disturbed,"
"defiant," and/or merely "being annoying" as if these presentations were a
diagnosis rather than an indicator of symptoms to be considered within the
context of a syndrome. It is always wise to locate the underlying cause of
behavioral observations (i.e., a disorder of the central nervous system) so that
appropriate, helpful, and nonpunitive measures can be implemented, knowing that
the child's behavior is not deliberate and that mistakes and misdeeds are the
result of her disability and are unintentional on her part.
Parents should be especially leery of
self-righteous educators who use the superficial psycho-babble "he chose"
implying that this child has made a conscious choice to put himself in a
position of disadvantage. If a child has been determined to have NLD, it is
important for everyone to understand that this impairment is neurological in
nature and there is no choice involved for that child. No child chooses to fail.
To dismiss or label the adjustment problems (which are symptoms) as "attention
getting" behavior, is as harmful as it is unprofessional.
The child with NLD can usually be
accommodated in a "fully-included" mainstreamed educational setting if her
unique academic and social needs are understood by her parents and her school
staff. A comprehensive and detailed Individualized Education Program (IEP) put
together by a team of informed experts will aid in a successful outcome. The
more extensive the IEP, the less likely the child will encounter unforeseen
roadblocks and/or fall through the cracks. She may also benefit from some
Special Education support services such as speech and language therapy for
deficiencies in linguistic pragmatics and occupational therapy for gross and
fine motor skill concerns.
All too often though, the coping
behaviors of the child with NLD are misinterpreted by uninformed adults as
"emotional" and/or "motivational" problems. However, when this child's verbal
strengths are capitalized upon and her teachers are flexible and receptive to
her needs, she can be quite successful in school. It is so easy for adults to
punish and to try to put the responsibility back on the child, but a true
professional will recognize that if a child is not fulfilling expectations, it
is due to faulty planning on the part of the educational team, and is in no way
a reflection on the child.
The child's parents have probably
already gained an intuitive or learned appreciation of what works best for their
particular child with NLD. Often this child prospers at home because of his
parents' insightful adaptive strategies, while continuing to struggle at school.
It is wise for educators to benefit from the knowledge that these parents can
offer regarding their child. School staff and parents should work closely
together in planning to accommodate this child's unique needs.
Although often suggested,
"insight-oriented," dynamic psycho-therapy has proven to be counterproductive as
a model of intervention for an individual with NLD and is not advised.
Individuals with NLD are often assumed to be very perceptive because they
display well-developed verbal skills. Since their symptomology can appear to be
emotionally-based, insight-oriented psychotherapy is frequently attempted. Dr.
Byron P. Rourke has found that "formal educational intervention" is the
treatment modality most likely to "increase the NLD youngsters probability of
success." Treatment within a class or center for the emotionally disturbed is
also not recommended, as therapeutic approaches to emotional problems are quite
different from those which have proven effective for the NLD syndrome.
The child with NLD requires
individualized approaches to educational intervention in order to succeed in
school because her right-hemisphere systems are dysfunctional or inaccessible to
her. The left cerebral hemisphere processes information based upon fixed systems
of rules and is not equipped to deal flexibly with problem-solving strategies.
Effective remedial methods include direct verbal training in planning,
organizing, studying, written expression, social cognition, and interpersonal
communication.
Unlike Individualized Education
Programs in which the primary goal is to master a continuum of curricular
skills, the educational program for the child with NLD consists of providing
additional coping skills, practical support, and CAMS. Interventions for this
child are not curative in nature, but rather designed to offer compensatory
skills and to lessen the daily stress he encounters. Some of the specific
compensations, accommodations, modifications, and strategies which should be
employed to help this child follow:
Compensations
-
This child will have difficulty
with internal and external organization and coordination. Tardiness is
something he may struggle with (despite great pains to be punctual) and this
should not be treated as a misbehavior. Help this child by allowing him
extra time to get places and by giving him verbal cues to navigate through
space. Continually assess his understanding of spatial and directional
concepts.
-
Never underestimate the gravity of
this disability. Dr. Rourke states, "One of the most frequent criticisms of
remedial intervention programs with this particular type of child is that
the remedial authorities are unaware of the extent and significance of the
child's deficits" and he emphasizes that "the principal impediment to
engaging in this rather slow and painstaking approach to teaching the child
with NLD is the caregiver's (faulty) impression that the child is much more
adept and adaptable than is actually the case." Dr. Rourke also warns that:
"Observers tend to overvalue the intelligence of NLD adolescents…(and) this
is the principal reason for an unwillingness to adopt an approach to formal
educational intervention that would increase the NLD youngster's probability
of success."
The naiveté of parents and
educators regarding the significance of the NLD syndrome inevitably leads to
inappropriate expectations being placed upon this child. Expectations for
this child should always be applied with flexibility, taking into
consideration the fact that she has different needs and abilities than her
peer group. (Note: This individual's progress is almost always further
impeded by anosognosia-the "virtual inability to reflect on the nature and
seriousness of [her own] problems").
-
Do not force independence on this
child if you sense she is not yet ready for something (trust your instincts
and be careful not to compare her with other children of the same age). It
is detrimental to isolate her, but don't make the mistake of thinking she
can be left to her own resources when faced with new and/or complex
situations. Give her verbal compensatory strategies to deal more effectively
with novel situations. The world can be very scary for someone who is
misreading 65% of all communication and she will naturally be reluctant to
try new things. The social skill development of this child has been delayed
by misconceptions which may have caused serious issues of insecurity to
evolve.
The myth of the "overprotective
mother" needs to be dismissed; parents and professionals must both assume a
"protective" and helpful role with the child with NLD. Dr. Rourke states,
"Although sensitive caregivers are often accused of 'overprotection', it is
clear that they may be the only ones who have an appreciation for the
child's vulnerability and lack of appropriate skill development." Care and
discretion need to be taken to shield the child from teasing, persecution,
and other sources of anxiety. Independence should be introduced gradually,
in controlled, non-threatening situations. The more completely those around
her understand this child and her particular strengths and weaknesses, the
better prepared they will be to promote attitudes of personal independence.
Never leave this child to her own devices in new activities or situations
which lack sufficient structure.
-
Avoid power struggles, punishment,
and threatening. This child does not understand rigid displays of authority
and anger. Threats, such as "if you (do this), then (something unfortunate)
will happen to you," only serve to destroy this child's sense of hope. The
goals and expectations assigned to him must be attainable and worthwhile.
Remember that taking away "privileges" will not cure a child of a
neurological disability (but may very well establish him on the path to
depression). This is an inappropriate intervention model on the part of the
adults involved and it is detrimental and damaging to this child's
development and well-being. The "confusion" and social awkwardness he
displays are real and unintentional; they should not be viewed as conduct to
be penalized.
-
All adults owe it to this child to
always assume the best - to always take a positive rather than a negative
approach. As we have seen, life is very demanding and difficult for the
child with NLD. Most of her unusual behavioral responses serve a purpose and
usually represent the child's own attempt at compensation. It is wise to try
to uncover the reason for the behavior and to help the child devise an
appropriate (more acceptable) replacement behavior (usually through a
detailed verbal explanation). Parents and professionals need to make the
effort to have the child explain his dilemma and to try to determine what
purpose the behavior might be serving. Then serve the child's need rather
than punishing her resulting behavior. Remember, as with all children, at
least 90% of your interactions with this child must be positive in nature!
Accommodations:
-
School assignments which require
merely copying text need to be modified or omitted, owing to the
visual-spatial nature of such an exercise. Active verbalization and/or
subvocalization are the best memory approaches for this child.
-
Test answer sheet layouts and the
arrangement of visual-spatial math assignments need to be simplified (no
credit should be lost for a correct answer placed in the wrong column or
space). Whenever possible, use of graph paper is recommended to keep columns
aligned in written math assignments or consumable math texts should be
provided for this student.
-
Paper and pencil tasks need to be
kept to a minimum because of finger dexterity and visual-spatial problems.
Occupational therapy is a consideration for the younger child. Verbally
mediated practices to improve handwriting may result in improvements in
control and fluency, but the process will remain laborious. Use of a
computer word processor is highly recommended for all written school
assignments, as the spatial and fine motor skills needed for typing are not
as complicated as those involved in handwriting.
-
The global confusions which
underlie nonverbal learning disorders also result in limiting the student's
ability to produce the quantity of written work normally expected of her
grade-level peers. This child requires continuous assistance with organizing
information and communicating in writing. Adjustments must be made in
teacher expectations for volume of written products. Additional time will be
needed for all written assignments.
-
Tasks requiring folding, cutting
with scissors, and/or arranging material in a visual-spatial manner (maps,
graphs, mobiles, etc.) will require considerable assistance, provided in an
accommodating manner or they should be eliminated entirely.
-
Any timed assignments will need to
be modified or eliminated. Processing of all information is performed at a
much slower rate when you are compensating for any type of cerebral
dysfunction. Time constraints often prove to be counterproductive, as this
student is easily overwhelmed by the unrealistic expectations of his
teachers.
-
Adults need to check often for
understanding and present information in plain and clear verbal terms (i.e.,
"spell out" everything). A "parts-to-whole" verbal teaching approach should
be utilized. This child will need to ask a lot of questions, as this is her
primary means of gathering information.
-
All expectations need to be direct
and explicit. Don't require this child to "read between the lines" to glean
your intentions. Avoid sarcasm, figurative speech, idioms, slang, etc.,
unless you plan to explain your usage. Write out exact expectations for any
situation where the child may seriously misperceive complex directions
and/or proper social cues. Feedback given to the student should always be
constructive and encouraging or there will be no benefits derived.
-
This student's schedule needs to be
as predictable as possible. He should be prepared in advance for changes in
routine, such as assemblies, field trips, minimum days, vacation days,
finals, etc.
-
This child needs to be assigned to
one case manager at school who will oversee her progress and can assure that
all of the school staff are implementing the necessary accommodations and
modifications. Inservice training and orientation for all school staff that
promotes tolerance and acceptance is a vital part of the overall plan for
success, as everyone must be familiar with, and supportive of, the child's
academic and social needs.
Modifications:
-
This child needs to be in a
learning environment that provides daily, non-threatening contact with
nondisabled peers (i.e., not a "special" or "alternative" program) in order
to further his social development.
This child will benefit from cooperative learning situations (when grouped
with "good role models"). Active verbalization is an important element in
how this child learns. She usually has extensive verbal information to share
with the others and can be exposed to the "give and take" of a miniature
social environment in a non-threatening, controlled milieu. Obviously, the
child with nonverbal learning disorders would not be expected to be the
"scribe" in a cooperative grouping - her contribution should be in the
verbal arena. The least effective learning model for this child is
isolation. She must be allowed to verbalize and to have verbal feedback in
order to learn.
-
Transitions will always be
difficult for this child so he will need time during the school day to
collect his thoughts before "switching gears." This may mean: extra time
before and after breaks to disengage and readjust to the changes in pace;
less changing of rooms and more time spent with one teacher; a study hall
that is built into the student's schedule at middle and high school levels;
and/or a carefully selected non-NLD peer "buddy" to help guide him through
the day.
Placement must be in an environment which has a well-established routine
because this child will not decipher non-verbal cues. She cannot adjust well
to constant changes in routine (this child lacks the ability to "wing it" in
times of doubt) and has learned to fear all new and/or unknown situations
and experiences. She needs to know what will happen next and to be able to
count on consistent responses from the staff who work with her.
Special presentation procedures need to be adapted for those subjects
requiring visual-spatial-organizational and/or nonverbal problem-solving
skills. Or, as Rourke suggests, "avoid such material altogether."
Strategies:
-
Do tell this child everything and
encourage her to give you verbal feedback. The most effective instructional
procedures are those that associate verbal labels with concrete situations
and experiences. "I shouldn't have to tell you" does not apply - assume you
do have to tell her. She cannot "look and learn."
Verbally teach (don't expect the child to observe) cognitive strategies for
the skills of conversational pragmatics (the "give and take" and comfortable
beginnings and endings of a conversation, how and when to change the
subject, formal versus informal conversational idiosyncracies, tone and
expression of voice, etc.) and nonverbal body language (facial expressions,
correct social distance, when the limit or cut-off point has been reached,
etc.). this child will not perceive that he is trying someone's patience
until that person verbally explodes! Give him some additional verbal cues
before the boiling point because he does not "sense" tension or displeasure.
-
Observe and expand the coping
techniques that the child has already acquired on his/her own. Focus on
developing flexible concepts and time order.
-
Group the child with "good role
models" so that she can label and learn appropriate behavior. Remember she
won't differentiate between appropriate versus inappropriate behavior unless
the distinctions are verbally pointed out to her. Isolation is the "kiss of
death" for this child.
-
Adult role models should "talk
their way" through situations in the presence of this child in order to give
him a verbal view of someone else's "internal speech" process. In essence,
you will be making your internal speech external so that the child can pick
up the skills needed to coordinate his own problem-solving approaches. Help
the child devise a sequence of steps for self-questioning and
self-monitoring, verbalizing each step.
-
Isolation, deprivation, and
punishment are not effective methods to change the behavior of a child who
is already trying his best to conform (but misinterpreting all kinds of
nonverbal cues). If inappropriate behaviors are causing problems at school,
a functional analysis and behavioral intervention plan detailing a course of
action which is designed to be useful and non-punitive in nature may need to
be a part of this child's IEP or 504 plan.
This article was written in l995 and
first published in l996.
© l996 by Sue Thompson, M.A., C.E.T. and used on OASIS with her permission.
For further information on NLD
CLICK HERE
to go to to Sue Thompson's The NLDline.
Biography
Sue Thompson holds a master's degree in Special
Education from St. Mary's College of California. She has taught for 25 years
in California public schools in both regular and special education
classrooms and now provides services to individuals as an Educational
Consultant and Therapist. Sue is certified in California to provide
educational therapy as a non-public agency, holds California credentials as
a learning and behavior specialist, and has been approved as an expert
witness in the area of NLD for legal proceedings. She is the author of
numerous articles regarding learning disabilities and she speaks often
before parent and teacher groups concerning learning and behavior problems.
Sue is a member of the Board of Directors of the East Bay LDA and, also, of
SHARE Support, Inc. a parent support organization.
In addition, Sue has written a wonderful book on
nonverbal learning disabilities, titled "The Source for Nonverbal
Learning Disorders".
PLEASE NOTE: This book was formerly titled "I
Shouldn't Have To Tell You: A Guide To Understanding Nonverbal Learning
Disorders."
It can be ordered from the publisher:
LinguiSystems, Inc.
1-800-776-4332 or 1-309-755-2300
Cost: $37.95