Auditory Processing Disorder
in the United Kingdom
(APDUK)
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Ideas to be Considered Prior to Creating an IEP for an APD
For those who have difficulty with multi-colour presentations.
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This will ensure :-
(i) that the learner has visual reinforcement of the oral instructions, should they forget or experience a delay in processing the information, and transferring the instructions to the kinaesthetic, the action of performing the task.
(ii) that the learner is given a sense of security in an area that has previously been a situation of failure.
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E.g. if they are to practise spellings or “wr” words tell them the purpose is to distinguish them from “r” spelling words etc.
E.g. Ask the learner to “put his pencils in the pot” and then “put his book on the pile”, instead of asking him to “tidy up”.
There is a need to build up a process of associations so that general requests can eventually be used.
Those with APD are not immediately aware that they have not understood something that has just been explained to them.
Many can train themselves to just listen to a speaker, and try to record the message in their long-term memories and then replay it later to try and make sense of what was said.
When doing this they will not try to ask questions as it stops the recording flow, and cannot answer questions asked of them.
(i) Oral information may, at first, appear to have made sense, but when they have to reproduce this information they may have not have fully understood or processed (retained) all the information needed to gain a full understanding.
(ii) Sometimes they will have not processed part of the message, and will be unaware of this,
e.g. they may go away and complete a task but miss out a vital component.
(iii) Sometimes they will not have processed any part of the message.
They will be totally unaware that they have missed anything, until they are asked about that message at a later date.
They will act as if they have not heard it.
(iv) It has been noted that the delayed processing coping strategy has been developed by adults with APD and by teenagers with APD.
Most adults have developed this coping strategy subconsciously,
but some teenagers may have developed it and may have been encouraged to use this skill to help themselves.
This delayed processing is done using the long term memory like a video recorder, but like most filing systems it sometimes takes a long time to find the correct file, with the right contents, just when you need it.
(v) APD learners use their short-term memories for their daily coping routines; which they need for their priority survival needs and young children do instinctively.
Adults may be able to select their priority routines with regard to their careers, or whatever they consider to be their main life priority, and that priority governs the use of the short - term memory (coping strategies and correction routines) everything else is secondary until that task is finished.
It may help to ask the APD learner a question, and prefix by saying I will ask you this question and come back to you in a moment for your answer.
(The teacher could then go on to ask another pupil a different question, and then come return for the APD learners answer)
This will give the APD learner an some extra time to process the question; and to formulate and process an answer
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Some APDs like to use music as a continuous and predictable background noise, which also helps eliminate other random distracting background noises.
Some APDs find FM audio systems useful in classroom / lecture environments as it concentrates the message, and eliminates background noise.
As a result of all the extra effort needed they can become very tired, or irritable and their behaviour may suffer.
They may have episodes of daydreaming or “switching off” for a while when things become too much.
Susceptibility to background noise and bright lights can lead to headaches and lapses in concentration.
A positive learning environment is essential.
Every effort should be made to promote a sense of self-worth.
This is caused by confusion in ascertaining what is expected.
This sometimes means learners find starting a task difficult and this can be misconstrued as laziness or negative behaviour.
They may need a great deal of help in planning a piece of work.
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Which makes them more susceptible to bullying.
Any negativity in this respect shown to them by a teacher can spread to their peers, and this should be not be tolerated.
Allow time for delayed processing.
Use a more visual approach to teaching, such as picture associations, coloured text, and different formatting of
text to make information stand out.
So that they can help the learner understand what they have to do, and explain it in terms that they can more
easily understand.
Parents cannot help if they do not know what the learner is expected to do.
Enabling the parents to explaining what the learner has found easy or difficult, and the coping strategies they use to complete the task.
Thus helping the teacher build up a better picture of the way the learner learns and increasing the teacher's ability to accommodate their learning style.
Coping routines are built on life experiences and at a young age this is difficult as the learner does not have too many to fall back on.
Small routines can grow.
The APD learner also needs to continually review these routines both new and old, as some new routines may bypass existing routines.
(One day able to do a task using a coping routine, but not able to do it the next day).
Ask the learner how they coping with a new task.
Both learner and teacher should be involved in this development process.
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So group conversations and debates are difficult, if not impossible, to process as they happen.
Many Adult APDs have subconsciously developed the skill of Delayed Processing.
(Which has been noted amongst adults and some teenagers with APD.)
This skill may be accelerated if younger APDs are aware of the nature of their disability at an early stage of their development.
They may appear to others to be slow in understanding verbal instructions or conversations.
They need to understand and make others aware that they will always be like this, and they will need to be able to explain that they have a disability to friends, teachers, and adults.
They will need to know something about the nature of their disability. Some of the advantages and disadvantages, the latter will be obvious to all.
The advantages will not be so apparent and less obvious to identify. As they develop their own coping strategies, they also develop the compensating skills from their own personal talents, such as a heightened visual perception.
And any interruption or break from their thought patterns during this process may require them to restart their understanding from the beginning all over again.
This is particularly relevant to the learning of Mathematics.
This is why some prefer to start a project and see it through to its conclusion, regardless of any time factors. This is partly because it has taken them so long to plan and start the task that they may forget what to do if it is left unfinished.
If learning tables is an ongoing problem, provide the learner with a ready-printed multiplication square to use, as many learners may never learn them.
This is not because they have problems with speech or do not know what they want to say, but are simply trying to retrieve the word they want from their long-term memory.
Word retrieval is also a major problem in producing written work.
This is part of the re-assurance process in which they
(i) Try to show others that they understand something about the
topic by going over it in their mind
(ii) Aid their understanding of the topic
(iii) Seek reassurance that they have understood the topic by
repeating it in their own words.
One of the main reasons why individuals with APD cannot understand speech on the telephone is that the phone companies send only part of the speech signal through the lines. The signal is degraded before it even gets to the recipient phone.
Individuals with processing disorder often have problems understanding the degraded signals and phone conversations can be complicated by this fact. And neither facial nor body cues are available to help the processing-impaired individual to compensate for what they have not processed.
This needs to be explained to their friends who may wish to communicate by telephone.
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Click on the link
IEP Ideas for an APD
to download this page as an Acrobat pdf. file
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Authors: G.Wadlow & A.Mountjoy
© APDUK 2002 -
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