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MENTAL RETARDATION
        and
HEARING IMPAIRMENT
       A Presentation By:
    Jill Angelique B. Limas
               and
       Cheryl L. Lobiano
DEFINITION of
    MENTAL RETARDATION
• sub-average intellectual functioning, existing
  concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior
  and manifested during the developmental period that
  adversely affects a child’s educational
  performance
What is Intellectual Functioning
              Level?
• Intellectual functioning level is defined by
  standardized tests that measure the ability
  to reason in terms of mental age
  (intelligence quotient or IQ).
• Mental retardation is defined as an IQ
  score below 70–75.
What are Adaptive Skills?
• Refers To Skills Needed For Daily Life.
 Communication
 Self care
 Social skills
 Home-living skills
 Leisure
 Health and safety
 Self-direction
 Functional academics
 Community use
 Work
PREVALENCE
• AAMR – estimates that 2.5% of the population
  has mental retardation
• The Arc – estimates at 3% of the population has
  this disability
• Ratio between boys and girls is at 1.5:1
CAUSES of MENTAL
            RETARDATION:
•   Genetic Factors
•   Pre-natal Illnesses and Issues
•   Childhood Illnesses and Issues
•   Environmental Factors
Genetic Factors
• 30% of cases
• May be caused by an inherited genetic
  abnormality
  –   Fragile x syndrome
  –   Single gene defects
  –   Accident or mutation in genetic developement
Pre-natal Illnesses and Issues
• Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS)
• Maternal infections and illnesses
  - glandular disorders, rubella, toxoplasmosis, and
    cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection
  - high blood pressure (hypertension)
    blood poisoning (toxemia)
• Birth defects that cause physical deformities
  of the head, brain, and central nervous
  system
Childhood Illnesses and Injuries
•   Hyperthyroidism
•   Whooping cough
•   Measles
•   Chickenpox
•   Hib disease
•   Meningitis
•   Encephalitis
•   Traumatic brain injury
Environmental Factors

• Ignored or neglected infants
• Children who live in poverty and suffer from
  malnutrition
• unhealthy living conditions
• Abuse
• improper or inadequate medical care
Characteristics of MR

• LEARNING CHARACTERISTICS
 Attention - difficulty focusing their attention,
  maintaining it, selectively attending to
  relevant stimuli, less attention to allocate,
  they do not know how to attend to the
  relevant aspects of dimensions of the
  problem.
 Memory - ability to remember information; factors that
  may contribute to the memory difficulties of persons
  with mental retardation include problems attending to
  relevant stimuli, inefficient rehearsal strategies, and an
  inability to generalize skills to novel settings or tasks.
 Academic Performance - Students with mental
  retardation usually have to work harder and practice
  longer than other students in order to learn academic
  skills, this deficiency is seen across all subject areas, but
  reading appears to be the weakest area, specially reading
  comprehension; they are also deficient in arithmetic
• Motivation - Past experiences with failure typically lead
  individuals with mental retardation to exhibit an external
  locus - they are likely to believe that the outcomes of their
  behavior are the result of circumstances and events beyond their
  personal control, rather than their efforts. Repeated episodes
  of failure also give rise learned helplessness - the
  perception that no matter how much effort they put forth, failure
  is inevitable. Accumulated experiences with failure also
  result in a style of learning and problem solving
  characterized as ouster-directedness - a loss of confidence
  and trust in one’s own abilities and solutions and a reliance on
  others for cues and guidance
• Generalization - the ability to learn a task or idea
  then apply it in other situations. Learning in
  someone who is mentally retarded is situation
  specific. Generalization of responses can be
  facilitated (e.g. by using concrete materials rather
  than abstract representations; by providing
  instruction in various settings where the
  strategies of skill will typically be used; by
  incorporating a variety of examples and
  materials; or by simply informing the pupils of
  the multiple applications that are possible).
• Language Development – delays in development
  of language; vocabulary more limited;
  grammatical structure and sentence complexity
  are often impaired; speech disorders are
  common (e.g errors of articulation – additions
  or distortions); fluency disorders (stuttering);
  voice disorders (hyper-nasal speech or concerns
  about loudness).
• SOCIAL & BEHAVIORAL CHARACTERISTICS
 Social problems – poor interpersonal skills,
  socially inappropriate or immature behavior
 Emotional problems – loneliness and depression
 Behavioral problems – compulsive eating, hair
  pulling, biting
 Adaptive behavior problems

• PHYSICAL & MEDICAL CHARACTERISTICS
 Less physically fit
HISTORY
• Ancient Greece and Rome – infacticide
• 2nd Century AD – sold for entertainment
• Dawning of Christianity - movement toward
  care for the less fortunate
• Jesus, Buddha, Mohammed, Confucius -
  advocated human treatment for the mentally
  retarded, developmentally disabled, or infirmed
• Middle ages (476 - 1799 A.D.) - the status and care of
  individuals with mental retardation varied greatly: more
  human practices evolved but many children were sold
  into slavery, abandoned, or left out in the cold
• 1690 - John Locke published his famous work “An
  Essay Concerning Human Understanding”
• 1790 - Jean-Marc-Gaspard Itard published an account
  of his work with Victor, the Wild Boy of Aveyron.
• 1848 – Edouard Seguin helped establish the
  Pennsylvania Training School
• 1850 - Samuel Gridley Howe began the School of
  Idiotic and Feeble Minded Youth
• 1896 - the first public school class for children
  with mental retardation began in Providence, RI.
• 1905 - Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon
  developed a test in France to screen students not
  benefiting from regular curriculum
• 1916 – Lewis Terman of Stanford University
  published the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale
  in the US.
• 1935 – Edgar Doll published the Vineyard Social
  Maturity Scale.
• 1950 – Parents formed the National Association for
  Retarded Children (The Arc)
• 1959 - AAMR published its first manual on the
  definition and classification of mental retardation, with
  diagnosis based on an IQ score of one standard
  deviation below the mean (approximately 85)
• 1961 – John F. Kennedy established the first
  President’s Panel on Mental Retardation
• 1969 – Bengt Nirje published a key paper defining
  normalization. Wolf Wolfensberger championed
  normalization in the United States.
• 1973 – AAMR published a revised definition that
  required a score on IQ tests of two standard deviations
  below the mean (approximately 70 or less) and
  concurrent deficits in adaptive behavior.
• 1975 - United States Congress passed the Education for
  the Handicapped Act, now titled the Individuals with
  Disabilities Education Act - guaranteed the appropriate
  education of all children with mental retardation and
  developmental disabilities, from school age through 21
  years of age
• 1986 – IDEA was amended to guarantee educational
  services to children with disabilities age 3 through 21
  and provided incentives for states to develop infant and
  toddler service delivery systems
• 1992 - AAMR published “System 92” a radically
  different definition of mental retardation with a
  classification system based on intensities of supports.
• 2002 – AAMR published revision of the 1992
  definition; retains classification by intensities of
  supports; returns to IQ of approximately two standard
  deviations below mean; adds social participation and
  interactions as fifth dimension of functioning.
CLASSIFICATION of MR
•   Mild
•   Moderate
•   Severe
•   Profound
Mild Mental Retardation

• 85% of the mentally retarded
• IQ score ranges from 50-75
• often acquire academic skills up to the 6th
  grade level
• can become fairly self-sufficient and in some
  cases live independently, with community
  and social support
Moderate Mental Retardation
• 10% of the mentally retarded
• IQ scores ranging from 35-55
• can carry out work and self-care tasks with
  moderate supervision
• typically acquire communication skills in childhood
• able to live and function successfully within the
  community in a supervised environment
Severe Mental Retardation
• 3-4% of the mentally retarded
• IQ scores of 20-40
• may master very basic self-care skills and some
  communication skills
• able to live in a group home
Profound Mental Retardation

• 1-2% of the mentally retarded
• IQ scores under 20-25
• may be able to develop basic self-care and
  communication skills with appropriate
  support and training
• need a high level of structure and supervision
TREATMENT
           and MEDICATION
• no treatments are available specifically for
  cognitive deficiency
• develop a comprehensive management plan for
  the condition
• requires input from care providers from multiple
  disciplines - special educators, language
  therapists, behavioral therapists, occupational
  therapists, and community services
• THANK YOU!!!

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Sped601 Mr

  • 1. MENTAL RETARDATION and HEARING IMPAIRMENT A Presentation By: Jill Angelique B. Limas and Cheryl L. Lobiano
  • 2. DEFINITION of MENTAL RETARDATION • sub-average intellectual functioning, existing concurrently with deficits in adaptive behavior and manifested during the developmental period that adversely affects a child’s educational performance
  • 3. What is Intellectual Functioning Level? • Intellectual functioning level is defined by standardized tests that measure the ability to reason in terms of mental age (intelligence quotient or IQ). • Mental retardation is defined as an IQ score below 70–75.
  • 4. What are Adaptive Skills? • Refers To Skills Needed For Daily Life.  Communication  Self care  Social skills  Home-living skills  Leisure  Health and safety  Self-direction  Functional academics  Community use  Work
  • 5. PREVALENCE • AAMR – estimates that 2.5% of the population has mental retardation • The Arc – estimates at 3% of the population has this disability • Ratio between boys and girls is at 1.5:1
  • 6. CAUSES of MENTAL RETARDATION: • Genetic Factors • Pre-natal Illnesses and Issues • Childhood Illnesses and Issues • Environmental Factors
  • 7. Genetic Factors • 30% of cases • May be caused by an inherited genetic abnormality – Fragile x syndrome – Single gene defects – Accident or mutation in genetic developement
  • 8. Pre-natal Illnesses and Issues • Fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) • Maternal infections and illnesses - glandular disorders, rubella, toxoplasmosis, and cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection - high blood pressure (hypertension) blood poisoning (toxemia) • Birth defects that cause physical deformities of the head, brain, and central nervous system
  • 9. Childhood Illnesses and Injuries • Hyperthyroidism • Whooping cough • Measles • Chickenpox • Hib disease • Meningitis • Encephalitis • Traumatic brain injury
  • 10. Environmental Factors • Ignored or neglected infants • Children who live in poverty and suffer from malnutrition • unhealthy living conditions • Abuse • improper or inadequate medical care
  • 11. Characteristics of MR • LEARNING CHARACTERISTICS  Attention - difficulty focusing their attention, maintaining it, selectively attending to relevant stimuli, less attention to allocate, they do not know how to attend to the relevant aspects of dimensions of the problem.
  • 12.  Memory - ability to remember information; factors that may contribute to the memory difficulties of persons with mental retardation include problems attending to relevant stimuli, inefficient rehearsal strategies, and an inability to generalize skills to novel settings or tasks.  Academic Performance - Students with mental retardation usually have to work harder and practice longer than other students in order to learn academic skills, this deficiency is seen across all subject areas, but reading appears to be the weakest area, specially reading comprehension; they are also deficient in arithmetic
  • 13. • Motivation - Past experiences with failure typically lead individuals with mental retardation to exhibit an external locus - they are likely to believe that the outcomes of their behavior are the result of circumstances and events beyond their personal control, rather than their efforts. Repeated episodes of failure also give rise learned helplessness - the perception that no matter how much effort they put forth, failure is inevitable. Accumulated experiences with failure also result in a style of learning and problem solving characterized as ouster-directedness - a loss of confidence and trust in one’s own abilities and solutions and a reliance on others for cues and guidance
  • 14. • Generalization - the ability to learn a task or idea then apply it in other situations. Learning in someone who is mentally retarded is situation specific. Generalization of responses can be facilitated (e.g. by using concrete materials rather than abstract representations; by providing instruction in various settings where the strategies of skill will typically be used; by incorporating a variety of examples and materials; or by simply informing the pupils of the multiple applications that are possible).
  • 15. • Language Development – delays in development of language; vocabulary more limited; grammatical structure and sentence complexity are often impaired; speech disorders are common (e.g errors of articulation – additions or distortions); fluency disorders (stuttering); voice disorders (hyper-nasal speech or concerns about loudness).
  • 16. • SOCIAL & BEHAVIORAL CHARACTERISTICS  Social problems – poor interpersonal skills, socially inappropriate or immature behavior  Emotional problems – loneliness and depression  Behavioral problems – compulsive eating, hair pulling, biting  Adaptive behavior problems • PHYSICAL & MEDICAL CHARACTERISTICS  Less physically fit
  • 17. HISTORY • Ancient Greece and Rome – infacticide • 2nd Century AD – sold for entertainment • Dawning of Christianity - movement toward care for the less fortunate • Jesus, Buddha, Mohammed, Confucius - advocated human treatment for the mentally retarded, developmentally disabled, or infirmed
  • 18. • Middle ages (476 - 1799 A.D.) - the status and care of individuals with mental retardation varied greatly: more human practices evolved but many children were sold into slavery, abandoned, or left out in the cold • 1690 - John Locke published his famous work “An Essay Concerning Human Understanding” • 1790 - Jean-Marc-Gaspard Itard published an account of his work with Victor, the Wild Boy of Aveyron. • 1848 – Edouard Seguin helped establish the Pennsylvania Training School • 1850 - Samuel Gridley Howe began the School of Idiotic and Feeble Minded Youth
  • 19. • 1896 - the first public school class for children with mental retardation began in Providence, RI. • 1905 - Alfred Binet and Theodore Simon developed a test in France to screen students not benefiting from regular curriculum • 1916 – Lewis Terman of Stanford University published the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Scale in the US. • 1935 – Edgar Doll published the Vineyard Social Maturity Scale.
  • 20. • 1950 – Parents formed the National Association for Retarded Children (The Arc) • 1959 - AAMR published its first manual on the definition and classification of mental retardation, with diagnosis based on an IQ score of one standard deviation below the mean (approximately 85) • 1961 – John F. Kennedy established the first President’s Panel on Mental Retardation • 1969 – Bengt Nirje published a key paper defining normalization. Wolf Wolfensberger championed normalization in the United States.
  • 21. • 1973 – AAMR published a revised definition that required a score on IQ tests of two standard deviations below the mean (approximately 70 or less) and concurrent deficits in adaptive behavior. • 1975 - United States Congress passed the Education for the Handicapped Act, now titled the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act - guaranteed the appropriate education of all children with mental retardation and developmental disabilities, from school age through 21 years of age • 1986 – IDEA was amended to guarantee educational services to children with disabilities age 3 through 21 and provided incentives for states to develop infant and toddler service delivery systems
  • 22. • 1992 - AAMR published “System 92” a radically different definition of mental retardation with a classification system based on intensities of supports. • 2002 – AAMR published revision of the 1992 definition; retains classification by intensities of supports; returns to IQ of approximately two standard deviations below mean; adds social participation and interactions as fifth dimension of functioning.
  • 23. CLASSIFICATION of MR • Mild • Moderate • Severe • Profound
  • 24. Mild Mental Retardation • 85% of the mentally retarded • IQ score ranges from 50-75 • often acquire academic skills up to the 6th grade level • can become fairly self-sufficient and in some cases live independently, with community and social support
  • 25. Moderate Mental Retardation • 10% of the mentally retarded • IQ scores ranging from 35-55 • can carry out work and self-care tasks with moderate supervision • typically acquire communication skills in childhood • able to live and function successfully within the community in a supervised environment
  • 26. Severe Mental Retardation • 3-4% of the mentally retarded • IQ scores of 20-40 • may master very basic self-care skills and some communication skills • able to live in a group home
  • 27. Profound Mental Retardation • 1-2% of the mentally retarded • IQ scores under 20-25 • may be able to develop basic self-care and communication skills with appropriate support and training • need a high level of structure and supervision
  • 28. TREATMENT and MEDICATION • no treatments are available specifically for cognitive deficiency • develop a comprehensive management plan for the condition • requires input from care providers from multiple disciplines - special educators, language therapists, behavioral therapists, occupational therapists, and community services