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You are here > Sections > Special Needs. > Teaching children with Dyspraxia.

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Teaching children with Dyspraxia.  
Author : Dyspraxia Assoc NZ







Created : 14 May 2002
Last Revision : 14 May 2002
WHAT IS DEVELOPMENTAL DYSPRAXIA?
Developmental Dyspraxia (DD) is a neurologically based impairment or immaturity of the organisation of movement. Associated with this may be problems of language, perception and thought. Affected children have a normal intelligence for their age but may have difficulty in both processing information and in communicating what they know or understand. It affects each child differently, therefore each child's difficulties are unique to him/her.

Problems may show in:-
Poor writing and drawing abilities.
Fine and/or gross motor skills- dislikes games, Physical Education, ball activities and playing outside.
Messy eating and drinking.
Slow or poor at dressing.
Slow learning e.g. to ride a bike.
Very distractable.
Falls and bumps into things a lot -- bruises on legs.
May be disruptive in the classroom.
Difficulty standing on one leg, hopping or jumping.
Difficulty copying text from book or blackboard.
Sequencing, affecting most areas of development.
Thought; with a normal intelligence, these children may have difficulty in planning and organising thoughts.
Language skills, word recall, communication difficulties. Language may be impaired or slow to develop.
Following instructions.
Social skills.
Emotional immaturity.

WHAT WILL HELP?
Reading relevant material will help you gain a deeper understanding -- many of the difficulties you encounter with the individual child can be directly accounted for by relating it to the information. With this understanding you can work out the most appropriate approach to teaching the child.

A difficulty of recalling stored information is a difficulty of process, not of memory nor of laziness. He would if he could, but he -- sometimes -- can't and learning takes 20 times the normal effort.
Information learned may not be reliably recalled -- for neurological reasons.
Instructions may need to be broken down and simplified. Impaired sequence can affect every area of development -- spelling, writing, maths, gross and fine motor skills, following instructions, rules to games.
Patience and a multi-sensory approach will help.
Try gently repeating or leading the memory until previous learning can be recalled. A rhythmical, phonological approach to reading, writing, maths, etc., helps.
Self-esteem is constantly at risk.
Brain Gym exercises, sensory-motor exercises, and mind-mapping may all help.
Try to ensure that expectations are communicated to the child clearly and concisely and are understood. You may need to tactfully lower your expectations, e.g. give the child less homework, enabling him to succeed.
Try to give the child a predictable routine, firm guidelines. Sudden changes in routines can cause major problems for the child with Dyspraxia
Explain the limits simply, ensure that they are constant and that the child has understood, and be prepared to repeat yourself calmly
Simplify choices, and don't offer them if you do not intend to give them.
Inappropriate behaviour is often out of the child's control. It needs to be stopped briefly and with understanding.
Prepare the child with warnings of 'Time to stop in five minutes', etc. He needs clear plans of action.
If the child is engaged in an activity to which he has been directed, make sure he really does know what to do, how and in what sequence. He may need extra or more time at an activity in order to finish it.
The child may have great difficulty in waiting for adult attention. This is because his processes are in full flight; if he waits too long, the learning moment may be gone.
Are there too many distractions? The child with Dyspraxia may be very distractable, so a simplified environment may help. If he sits at the front of the class/mat there will be less visual distractions.
If you find something you don't understand, consulting the child's parents or therapist may help.
Remember -- he would if he could, but he sometimes can't. He is not lazy, he just sometimes loses his praxis or plan!

What the teacher can do:-
Make allowances, lower expectations in spite of child seeming bright enough.
Allow more time.
Adjust quantity of work.
Give gentle reminders.
Good teaching practices win every time.
Listen to parent, who knows this child better than anyone ever will.
Break tasks down into more manageable parts - simplify!
Don't assume the child has understood.
Give single instructions rather than a string because ...

If you treat the child the same as the others, his failure rate will be immeasureably higher than it needs to be. He knows that he is not the same; a higher failure rate means a very much lower self esteem, etc., etc.


This article and more information can be found at http://www.dyspraxia.org.nz/how_teach.htm
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