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1.
Percept Mot Skills ; 74(2): 599-609, 1992 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-1594421

ABSTRACT

This research explored ways gifted children with learning disabilities perceive and recall auditory and visual input and apply this information to reading, mathematics, and spelling. 24 learning-disabled/gifted children and a matched control group of normally achieving gifted students were tested for oral reading, word recognition and analysis, listening comprehension, and spelling. In mathematics, they were tested for numeration, mental and written computation, word problems, and numerical reasoning. To explore perception and memory skills, students were administered formal tests of visual and auditory memory as well as auditory discrimination of sounds. Their responses to reading and to mathematical computations were further considered for evidence of problems in visual discrimination, visual sequencing, and visual spatial areas. Analyses indicated that these learning-disabled/gifted students were significantly weaker than controls in their decoding skills, in spelling, and in most areas of mathematics. They were also significantly weaker in auditory discrimination and memory, and in visual discrimination, sequencing, and spatial abilities. Conclusions are that these underlying perceptual and memory deficits may be related to students' academic problems.


Subject(s)
Achievement , Child, Gifted/psychology , Learning Disabilities/psychology , Mental Recall , Speech Perception , Visual Perception , Aptitude , Child , Concept Formation , Female , Humans , Learning Disabilities/diagnosis , Male , Mathematics , Reading , Verbal Learning
2.
J Learn Disabil ; 23(8): 491-8, 1990 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-2246601

ABSTRACT

Intellectual patterns of gifted students with learning disabilities were studied to determine cognitive factors characterizing these children. Twenty-four gifted children with learning disabilities (LD) and a control group of nondisabled gifted children were administered the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised (WISC-R) (Wechsler, 1974). While differences between the two groups on individual subtests were examined, a comparison of broader factors was emphasized in discovering cognitive patterns that might suggest effective intervention. Experimental and control performances were compared on 14 factor scores, using cognitive classification systems of Bannatyne (1971), Kaufman (1975), Rapaport, Gill, and Schafer (1946), and Wechsler (1974). Gifted students with LD were more reliant on verbal conceptualization and reasoning than the control students. They also demonstrated deficiencies in short-term auditory memory and sound discrimination. The gifted group with LD exhibited the Organic Brain Syndrome factor (Wechsler, 1974) to a significantly greater extent than did the control group.


Subject(s)
Child, Gifted/psychology , Learning Disabilities/diagnosis , Wechsler Scales , Achievement , Child , Humans , Neurocognitive Disorders/diagnosis , Psychometrics
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