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What are Nonverbal Learning Disabilities?

Article Topics: Nonverbal LD, Assessment,
Article types: General Information,

Submitted By: Diane Wagner

View Submitter's Profile (dwagner)


From an article by Patti Brace in L.D.A. of Kingston Winter 1998 Newsletter


Nonverbal learning disabilities are less well known than language-based learning disabilities such as dyslexia. Typically, people with nonverbal LD show:


- excellent memory for things they hear

- poor memory for things they see

- good reading ability

- very poor arithmetic ability

- excellent verbal expression and verbal reasoning

- problems with written expression (often because of poor handwriting)

- problems with sense of direction, estimation of size, shape, distance

- problems reading facial expressions, gestures, social cues, tones of voice


Nonverbal learning disabilities often go undiagnosed because reading ability tends to be regarded as the chief indicator of academic well-being by most public school systems. Because it has a pronounced effect on social interaction, as well as academic performance, nonverbal LD presents a unique challenge to parents, teachers and adult consumers.

The chief characteristics of nonverbal LD include:

- tactile-perceptual deficits, usually on the left side of the body;

- coordination difficulties, again often more marked on the left side of the body;

- problems with visual‑spatial organization;

- extreme difficulty adapting to new and complex situations;

- reliance on rote behaviours (which may or may not be appropriate) in new situations;

- trouble understanding nonverbal feedback in social situations;

- problems with social perception, social judgment and social interaction;

- distorted sense of time;

- very strong rote verbal abilities (e.g. large vocabulary);

- reliance on language as the primary means for social relating, information gathering and relief from anxiety;

- difficulties with arithmetic and, later, with scientific concepts and theories;

- inattention and hyperactivity earlier in childhood; and social withdrawal and isolation later.


When people with nonverbal LD are assessed, typically their performance IQ is significantly lower than their verbal IQ because of the visual-spatial weaknesses.

Young Children

Young nonverbal LD children tend to stray from home or groups and get lost easily. They often spill things at mealtime because of problems with motor coordination and have trouble dressing themselves for the same reason. Problems with spatial skills appear in weak understanding of nonverbal information (e.g. pictures, cartoons, passage of time) and nonverbal tasks like puzzles.

Many children with nonverbal LD use words in an adult fashion and learn to read before school age because of their auditory strengths. Thus, they often try to gain information about the world around them by asking endless questions of adults, rather than by exploring on their own. The inaccuracy of their visual perception, physical awkwardness and difficulty integrating information in space and time make it harder for them to make sense of the physical world. This compensation can compound the problem, however, for the less the child engages in physical exploration, the less s/he learns about relationships between objects in space.

Academic Issues

Students with nonverbal LD generally appear to possess above-average cognitive skills because of their verbal strengths, but often show academic difficulties as they reach secondary levels.

Spatial and coordination problems make printing and writing, learning math, telling time, reading and colouring maps and keeping their place on the page difficult from early grades. By high school, more complex verbal language is based on nonverbal processes like spatial relationships (in science, for example), logical ordering, and sequencing (both skills necessary for writing essays). This can cause problems in subject areas other than math. As well, students often experience difficulties with sense of time, arranging written material on a page, making change, and sewing and typing, all of which demand good spatial awareness.

Throughout the school years, kids with nonverbal LD are often inattentive and poorly organized because they have trouble integrating and interpreting incoming information. They tend to pay attention to each detail as it comes in, rather than combining them into more meaningful wholes. The effort quickly leads to information overload, with which these students will often cope by clinging to familiar habits and routines that help them to structure their world. Sometimes this adaptation appears as misbehaviour.

In later secondary and postsecondary education, information is frequently presented in lecture form. For students with nonverbal LD, problems arise because they have to integrate information they hear with the act of writing, already difficult because writing is often awkward and slow. As well, students who attend equally to individual details as they appear have enormous difficulty separating important from unimportant information.

Teachers can support students with nonverbal LD by outlining material to be covered, using overheads containing central points while lecturing, providing clear schedules of the day's events, breaking complex tasks down into smaller, sequenced pieces, using discussion rather than lectures to develop and integrate ideas, and using students' strengths in rote learning to help them develop habits and routines to organize themselves and their work.

Social and Emotional Issues

Possibly the biggest area of concern for children and adults with nonverbal LD is social skills. One result of having trouble processing nonverbal and spatial information is missing or misinterpreting subtle social cues, like facial expressions, gestures and tones of voice. For example, a phrase like "nice going" means something different when you've just dropped a ball or tripped over a skipping rope (again) than when you've gotten a perfect score on a spelling test. Confusing the two can spell "disaster" on the playground.

Unlike a student who has difficulty reading but does well with social and sports activities, students with nonverbal LD are affected in all areas. This can lead to social isolation, and kids will sometimes try to alleviate this by interacting only with adults, who are more appreciative of their verbal strengths and less concerned about physical awkwardness or violations of social conventions.

However, because children with nonverbal LD are highly verbal, parents and teachers tend to attribute their academic and social failure to laziness or poor character. This can lead to emotional problems like depression and anxiety that are expressed in internalizing ways (e.g. nail and cuticle biting, headaches, stomach problems, phobias).

Parents and teachers can help children with nonverbal LD learn more effective social skills by talking about social rules and playing games in which children guess the feelings that go with facial expressions and tones of voice (and figure out appropriate responses!). Friends and spouses of adults with nonverbal LD can help by pointing out social rules and articulating the information often carried by a look or a gesture.

References

Gross-Tsur, Varda et al. Developmental Right-Hemisphere Syndrome: Clinical Spectrum of the Nonverbal Learning Disability. Journal of Learning Disabilities, February 1995.

Harnadek, Michael and Byron P. Rourke. Principal Identifying Features of the Syndrome of Nonverbal Learning Disabilities in Children. Journal of Learning Disabilities, March 1994.

Humphries,Tom. Nonverbal Learning Disabilities: A Distinct Group Within Our Population

Communique (LDA Ontario), Autumn 1993.

Moss-Thompson, Owinda. The Nonverbal Dilemma. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1985.

Rourke, Byron. Nonverbal Learning Disabilities: Development of the Syndrome and the Model. News & Events (LDA Nova Scotia), February 1997.

Used with permission of the author


Comments:

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Posted by: veronica2012, on Thursday, March 29, 2012 - 10:36

I have also been diagnosed with nonverbal learning disability, and I too, have bad memory for things I hear and Ok memory for things I see...

I socialize very well but have very few friends and avoid close relationships with people. It's tiring and stressfull for me to maintain personal relationships.

I cannot comprehend numbers, and since I was undiagnosed for so long the shame has turned into a phobia, so I avoid numbers at all costs. I just don't understand how 2 dimensional symbols can represent quantity.

I get messier and messier as I get older, and like the article says can't decipher main ideas from a larger picture. This makes it hard for me to organize things from paperwork to day to day planning. I lose things constantly.

I think the anxiety we develop plays a large part in memory and day to day functioning as well. This is a difficult disability to live with and I wish there was more support and were more resources available. Maybe someday...


Posted by: cloveapple, on Sunday, January 30, 2011 - 01:28

plainjones said: "Most
troubling to me is my impaired cognitive \"map\" of locations, compass point positions, ability to navigate from one place to another, the relation of locations to each other. Are there others out there who may have lived in a city for years, and can only navigate the roads by memory--not with any help of being able to relate locations to each other ? I'm often lost when driving,"

Check out the website http://www.gettinglost.ca/Home.html and you'll find others with the same problem or similar problems.


Posted by: plainjones, on Monday, July 21, 2003 - 10:30

Re steven's comments:

I also share some but not all features
of nvld.

Not in keeping with the list in the article, I have a much stronger memory for things seen than heard and am good at reading social clues.
However, I do have trouble sorting
details, prioritizing them. Most
troubling to me is my impaired cognitive \"map\" of locations, compass point positions, ability to navigate from one place to another, the relation of locations to each other. Are there others out there who may have lived in a city for years, and can only navigate the roads by memory--not with any help of being able to relate locations to each other ? I'm often lost when driving,
and since very few people have
this problem, I don't know how to
explain it. Those who I have told
don't believe I can't do this. I can
read a map and navigate that way, but there's no map
in my head regardless of how many
times I have been some place.

talk to me!


Posted by: steven, on Saturday, July 5, 2003 - 13:25

I was diagnosed with this Nonverbal Learning Disabilty. But the chief characteristics sounds to be the reversed for me:
I have:
- Bad memory for things I hear

- Ok memory for things they see

- poor reading ability

- very good arithmetic ability

- poor verbal expression and verbal reasoning

- problems with written expression (often because of poor handwriting)

- little problems with sense of direction, estimation of size, shape, distance

- And very few problems with reading facial expressions, gestures, social cues, tones of voice

(I guess I'm out of the norm!)

God Bess

Steven


Posted by: kootch, on Friday, February 21, 2003 - 01:59

VERY WELL DONE ARTICLE. STRONGLY RESEARCHED. I FIT THE SPECIFIC ISSUES PRESENTED LIKE A TEA. I DO LACK SOME OF THE SOCIAL CUES,AND JUDGEMENT,COMMON SENSE. MY MATH IS DEPLORABLE. MY NON VERBAL SKILLS BAD. NO LICENSE,OR COOKING SKILLS. I HAVE GOOD VERBAL SKILLS. READING,WRITING, ABSTRACT REASONING.SOCIAL SCIENCES.BEST REGARDS KOOTCH.


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