Diagnostic Symptoms for Visual and Auditory Perceptual Disabilities

Introduction

Many times parents may be confused as to what a perceptual disability is and the different types involved. There are many symptoms that may indicate problems in a certain perceptual area. Some of these are observable, while others are discovered through intakes and testing. What follows is a list of symptoms that may reflect perceptual disabilities in a variety of visual areas:

 

General Visual Perceptual Problems– The student:

  • Exhibits poor motor coordination
  • Is awkward motorically-frequent tripping, stumbling, bumps into things, has trouble skipping,jumping
  • Demonstrates restlessness, short attention span, perseveration
  • Exhibits poor handwriting, artwork, drawing
  • Exhibits reversals of b,d,p,q,u,n when writing beyond a chronological age of 7 or 8
  • Inverts numbers (17 for 71), reverses as well
  • Gives correct answers when teacher reads test, but can’t put answers down on paper
  • Exhibits poor performance in group achievement tests
  • Appear brighter than test scores indicate
  • Poor perception of time and space.

 

Visual-Receptive Process Disability– The student:

  • Does not enjoy books, pictures
  • Fails to understand what is read
  • Is unable to give a simple explanation of contents of a picture
  • Is unable to categorize pictures

 

Visual-Association Disability- The student:

  • Is unable to tell a story from pictures; can only label objects in the pictures
  • Is unable to understand what he or she reads
  • Fails to handle primary workbook tasks
  • Needs auditory cues and clues

Manual-Expressive Disability-The student:

  • Has poor handwriting and drawing
  • Communicates infrequently with gestures
  • Is poor at “acting out” ideas, feelings
  • Is clumsy, uncoordinated
  • Plays games poorly; can’t imitate other children in games

 

Visual-Memory Disability- The student:

  • Exhibits frequent misspellings, even after undue practice
  • Misspells his own name frequently
  • Can’t write alphabet, numbers, computation facts
  • Identifies words one day and fails to the next

Diagnostic Symptoms for Auditory Perceptual Disabilities

 

What follows is a list of symptoms that may reflect perceptual disabilities in a variety of auditory areas.

 

General Auditory Perceptual Indicators- The student:

  • Appears less intelligent than IQ tests indicate
  • Does many more things than one would expect: puts puzzles together, fixes broken objects,
  • and so on
  • Appears to have a speech problem
  • May emphasize wrong syllables in words
  • May sequence sounds oddly
  • May use “small words” incorrectly
  • Appears not to listen or comprehend
  • Watches teacher’s or adult’s faces intently, trying to grasp words

 

Auditory Receptive Process Disability- The student:

  • Fails to comprehend what he or she hears
  • Exhibits poor receptive vocabulary
  • Fails to identify sounds correctly
  • Fails to carry out directions

 

Auditory Association Disability- The student:

  • Fails to enjoy being read to him by someone else
  • Has difficulty comprehending questions
  • Raises hand to answer question but gives foolish response
  • Is slow to respond; takes a long time to answer
  • Has difficulty with abstract concepts presented auditorily

 

Verbal Expressive Disability- The student:

  • Mispronounces common words
  • Uses incorrect word endings and plurals
  • Omits correct verbal endings
  • Makes grammatical or syntactical errors that do not reflect those of his or her parents
  • Has difficulty blending sounds

 

Auditory Memory Disability: The student:

  • Does not know address or phone number
  • Fails to remember instructions
  • Has difficulty memorizing nursery rhymes or poems
  • Has difficulty knowing the alphabet

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