Special Education
Special Education
Glossary, Categories and Definitions
Special Education provides students, parents/guardians and teachers with a host of helpful information. In this section, you will get a better understanding of the terminology associated with special education, including the different categories of exceptionalities.
Glossary
The Education Act contains the following definitions, which pertain to special education:
Special education program means, in respect of an exceptional pupil, an educational program that is based on and modified by results of continuous assessment and evaluation and that includes a plan containing specific objectives and an outline of educational services that meets the needs of the exceptional pupil.
Special Education services means facilities and resources, including support personnel and equipment, necessary for developing and implementing a special education program.
Exceptional pupil means a pupil whose behavioural, communicational, intellectual, physical or multiple exceptionalities are such that he/she is considered to need placement in a special education program by a committee.
Categories of Exceptionalities in Rainbow Schools
The Ministry of Education has provided us with details of the categories and definitions of exceptionalities for students in Rainbow Schools. The following lists the multiple student exceptionalities and describes the individual characteristics associated with each.
Behavioural – A learning disorder characterized by specific behaviour problems over such a period of time, and to such a marked degree, and to such a nature, as to adversely affect educational performance, and that may be accompanied by one or more of the following: a) an inability to build or to maintain interpersonal relationships; b) excessive fears or anxieties; c) a tendency to compulsive reaction; or d) an inability to learn that cannot be traced to intellectual, sensory, or other health factors, or any combination thereof.
Communicational – Autism –A severe learning disorder that is characterized by: disturbances in rate of educational development; ability to relate to the environment; mobility; perception, speech, and language; and lack of the representational symbolic behaviour that precedes language.
Communicational – Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing – An impairment characterized by deficits in language and speech development because of a diminished or non-existent auditory response to sound.
Communicational – Language Impairment – A learning disorder characterized by an impairment in comprehension and/or use of verbal communication or the written or other symbol system of communication, which may be associated with neurological, psychological, physical, or sensory factors, and which may: a) involve one or more of the form, content, and function of language in communication; and b) include one or more of the following -language delay, dysfluency, voice and articulation development, which may or may not be organically or functionally based.
Communicational – Speech Impairment – A disorder in language formulation that may be associated with neurological, psychological, physical, or sensory factors; that involves perceptual motor aspects of transmitting oral messages; and that may be characterized by impairment in articulation, rhythm, and stress.
Communicational – Learning Disability –One of a number of neurodevelopmental disorders that persistently and significantly has an impact on the ability to learn and use academic and other skills and that:
- affects the ability to perceive or process verbal or non-verbal information in an effective and accurate manner in students who have assessed intellectual abilities that are at least in the average range;
- results in (a) academic underachievement that is inconsistent with the intellectual abilities of the student (which are at least in the average range), and/or (b) academic achievement that can be maintained by the student only with extremely high levels of effort and/or with additional support;
- results in difficulties in the development and use of skills in one or more of the following areas: reading, writing, mathematics, and work habits and learning skills;
- may typically be associated with difficulties in one or more cognitive processes, such as phonological processing; memory and attention; processing speed; perceptual-motor processing; visual-spatial processing; executive functions (e.g., self-regulation of behaviour and emotions, planning, organizing of thoughts and activities, prioritizing, decision making);
- may be associated with difficulties in social interaction (e.g., difficulty in understanding social norms or the point of view of others); with various other conditions or disorders, diagnosed or undiagnosed; or with other exceptionalities;
- is not the result of a lack of acuity in hearing and/or vision that has not been corrected; intellectual disabilities; socio-economic factors; cultural differences; lack of proficiency in the language of instruction; lack of motivation or effort; gaps in school attendance or inadequate opportunity to benefit from instruction.
Intellectual – Giftedness – An unusually advanced degree of general intellectual ability that requires differentiated learning experiences of a depth and breadth beyond those normally provided in the regular school program to satisfy the level of educational potential indicated.
Intellectual – Mild Intellectual Disability – A learning disorder characterized by a) an ability to profit educationally within a regular class with the aid of considerable curriculum modification and supportive services b) an inability to profit educationally within a regular class because of slow intellectual development c) a potential for academic learning, independent social adjustment, and economic self-support.
Intellectual – Developmental Disability – A severe learning disorder characterized by a) an inability to profit from a special education program for students with mild intellectual disabilities because of slow intellectual development b) an ability to profit from a special education program that is designed to accommodate slow intellectual development c) a limited potential for academic learning, independent social adjustment, and economic self-support.
Physical – Physical Disability – A condition of such severe physical limitation or deficiency as to require special assistance in learning situations to provide the opportunity for educational achievement equivalent to that of students without exceptionalities who are of the same age or developmental level.
Physical – Blind and Low Vision – A condition of partial or total impairment of sight or vision that, even with correction, affects educational performance adversely.
Multiple Exceptionalities – A combination of learning or other disorders, impairments, or physical disabilities, that is of such nature as to require, for educational achievement, the services of one or more teachers holding qualifications in special education and the provision of support services appropriate for such disorders, impairments, or disabilities.
No Designation – The profile of the student does not meet current Ministry of Education definitions of exceptionality.