Focusing on Strengths to Teach Children with Learning Disabilities

When Australian mother of four, Michelle Higgins, moved to the United States earlier this year, her son experienced a revolutionary change in how his learning disability was dealt with at school. A seven year old who'd been diagnosed with a mixture of reading and math disabilities and an attention deficit disorder, her son had struggled to receive adequate attention in his Australian school, despite the efforts of some terrific teachers' aides. By contrast the American education system's approach to learning difficulties was “streets ahead”, Michelle says.
“One of the biggest advantages of the US system for children with a learning disability is the level of coordination between service-providers made possible by the fact that it is all provided in-house. It is truly a team approach and that team includes the classroom teacher, school psychologist, speech therapist, and resource teachers. These professionals can all share information on a regular basis about how my son is doing and make adjustments as needed."
And her observations in the US and Australia of her child’s educational and emotional needs reflects recent comments here by professionals about the need for teachers to focus on a child's other abilities when teaching children with learning disabilities:
“When your child is diagnosed with a learning disability or other issue it is hard not to get caught up in the negative. After all, the reason you have sought a diagnosis or the school has recommended you go down this path is because your child is having problems of some sort. But my favourite teachers in Australia and the US were also looking for the positive, how to harness my child's strengths in the face of their challenges.”
How Smart is Your Child?
Do you focus on how smart your children are, or how they are smart? This is a question often asked by Professor Howard Gardner. An Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Harvard University, Gardner is an expert on education theory and describes himself as a ‘student of creativity’.

Last month in Melbourne, the Australian Psychological Society hosted a conference with the theme: Theory to Practice: Positive Development and Wellbeing. Professor Mather spoke about the need to identify the strengths of a child with a learning disability, and the importance of teachers matching their teaching style with each child’s particular learning style. “Some children are better with verbal instruction or information, and others with written, so it is possible to adapt your teaching style to meet a child’s learning needs.”
What is a Learning Disability?
A child with a learning disability has a disorder affecting some of his learning, memory, understanding, organisation or use of verbal or non-verbal information. A learning disability is not an intellectual disability. Examples of learning disabilities commonly diagnosed in children are dyslexia and dyscalculia. Often ‘hidden’, a learning disability may not become obvious until, for example, a teacher notices a difference between the knowledge a child demonstrates in discussion, and his results in written exams or assignments.
Building Islands of Competence for Resilient Children
Focusing on a child’s areas of strong ability to compensate for the areas in which she may struggle is critical to her learning: “Sometimes strength can be ignored because all the focus is on struggle; so they are not looking at a child who is great at music for example, or a great athlete or who has strong social skills,” explains Professor Mather. Part of the solution includes setting up a classroom where there are positive experiences for a child with a learning disability – for example a teacher “may choose to let a child do a report orally instead of in writing so the child can demonstrate their knowledge in a way where they excel.”
Being passionately involved in her son’s development and education, Michelle Higgins

Robert Brooks is another educator and psychologist who emphasises the advantage of creating opportunities for success, or “building islands of competence”. Children need to learn to identify their successes as something they can control – this is part of the recipe for raising a resilient child, he says. “These islands [of success] serve as sources of satisfaction and pride, especially when we assume responsibility for fortifying these islands and when significant people in our lives demonstrate appreciation for our accomplishments.” Parents of children with a learning disability can bolster their children’s resilience in this way and so make them less vulnerable to the negative impacts of the mistakes they will inevitably make. By teaching a child that his accomplishments are not due to luck or chance but a result of personal strengths and effort, parents and teachers are contributing to his resilient mindset. Brooks says building these islands of competence helps to “prepare for future adversity and enable the potential for change and continued personal growth throughout their lives.”
If Your Child Has a Learning Disability
If you know or suspect that your child has a learning disability, Professor Mather recommends:
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