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Understanding Intellectual Disability: A Guide for Professionals
and Parents supports professionals and parents in understanding
critical concepts, correct assessment procedures, delicate and
science-infused communication practices and treatment methods
concerning children with intellectual disabilities. From a
professional perspective, this book relies on developmental
neuropsychology and psychiatry to describe relevant measures and
qualitative observations when making a diagnosis and explores the
importance of involving parents in the reconstruction of a child's
developmental history. From a parent's perspective, the book shows
how enriched environments can empower children's learning
processes, and how working with patients, families, and
organizations providing care and treatment services can be
effectively integrated with attachment theory. Throughout seven
chapters, the book offers an exploration of diagnostic procedures,
new insights on the concept of intelligence and the role of
communication and secure attachment in the mind's construction.
With expertise from noteworthy scholars in the field, the reader is
given an overview of in-depth assessment and intervention practices
illustrated by several case studies and examples, as well as a
lifespan perspective from a Human Rights Model of disability.
Understanding Intellectual Disability is an accessible guide
offering an up-to-date vision of intellectual disability and is
essential for psychologists, health care professionals, special
educators, students in clinical psychology, and parents. Things are
connected through invisible bonds: you cannot pluck a flower
without unsettling a star. Galileo Galilei
Understanding Intellectual Disability: A Guide for Professionals
and Parents supports professionals and parents in understanding
critical concepts, correct assessment procedures, delicate and
science-infused communication practices and treatment methods
concerning children with intellectual disabilities. From a
professional perspective, this book relies on developmental
neuropsychology and psychiatry to describe relevant measures and
qualitative observations when making a diagnosis and explores the
importance of involving parents in the reconstruction of a child's
developmental history. From a parent's perspective, the book shows
how enriched environments can empower children's learning
processes, and how working with patients, families, and
organizations providing care and treatment services can be
effectively integrated with attachment theory. Throughout seven
chapters, the book offers an exploration of diagnostic procedures,
new insights on the concept of intelligence and the role of
communication and secure attachment in the mind's construction.
With expertise from noteworthy scholars in the field, the reader is
given an overview of in-depth assessment and intervention practices
illustrated by several case studies and examples, as well as a
lifespan perspective from a Human Rights Model of disability.
Understanding Intellectual Disability is an accessible guide
offering an up-to-date vision of intellectual disability and is
essential for psychologists, health care professionals, special
educators, students in clinical psychology, and parents. Things are
connected through invisible bonds: you cannot pluck a flower
without unsettling a star. Galileo Galilei
For decades, research on children's literacy has been dominated by
questions of how children learn to read. Especially among
Anglophone scholars, cognitive and psycholinguistic research on
reading has been the only approach to studying written language
education. Echoing this, debates on methods of teaching children to
read have long dominated the educational scene. This book presents
an alternative view. In recent years, writing has emerged as a
central aspect of becoming literate. Research in cognitive
psychology has shown that writing is a highly complex activity
involving a degree of planning unknown in everyday conversational
uses of language. At the same time, developmental studies have
revealed that when young children are asked to "write," they show a
surprisingly sophisticated understanding of the representational
constraints of alphabetic writing systems. They show this
understanding long before they can read conventional writing on
their own.
The rich structure of meanings involved in the word "text"
provided the glue that brought together a group of scholars from
several disciplines in an international workshop held in Rome.
Reflecting the state of the field at the time, the majority of the
workshop participants were scholars working in languages other than
English, especially the romance languages. Their work mirrors a
linguistic and psychological research tradition that Anglophone
scholars knew little of until recently. This volume provides
English-language readers with updated versions of the papers
presented at the meeting. The topics discussed at the workshop are
represented in the chapters as follows:
* the relationship between acquisition of language and familiarity
with written texts;
* the reciprocal "permeability" between spoken and written
language;
* the initial phases of text construction by children; and
* the educational conditions that facilitate written language
acquisition and writing practice.
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