Another reporter has misused “Learning Disability” as a generic. Writing a feature article for the Times and Democrat (Orangeburg, SC, US), Donna Holman wrote,
It was Joni Bowers#’ 19th birthday, and this year was planned to be better than any before. Joni has Down’s Syndrome, which could be considered a learning disability, but this happy young woman views her life as a learning opportunity, turning her handicap into an endless challenge to demonstrate her learning ability
Although “learning disability” means “mental retardation” when used in the UK, that’s not the case in the US. Those of us concerned with LD obviously need to do a better job of informing the public, especially reporters, about Learning Disabilities.
Sphere: Related Content
More getting-it-wrong on LD
In a column for the MetroWest Daily News (Framingham, MA, USA) entitled “Standards takes ‘normal’ out of child’s reach,” Dan Greenberg comments on how concern about educational standards may have the unintended consequence of causing simple individual differences to be recognized as Learning Disabilities. Greenberg, who I think is the same Dan Greenberg widely respected for his reporting on science matters, argues that educational standards wrongly promote an expectation of uniformity among children.
Predicated on this analysis, Greenberg argues that
Greenberg carries his argument to this ending:
Apart from the misinformation that undergirds his analysis, Greenberg’s analysis is a good one. Let’s start with the good part: If standards lead to the homogenization of children’s outcomes, those standards are something worthy of resistance. On that much I agree. On other points, however, I find his reporting and reasoning inadequate.
O.K. I’ll quit.
Sphere: Related Content