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Tertiary Initiatives for People with a Disability

Please note that the TIPD project will cease to operate from Friday 27th August,1999. This website will be maintained until 31st December, 1999. TIPD would like to thank those people and organisations that have supported the project since it began in 1991.


MAKING THE TRANSITION TO TERTIARY STUDY - a guide to helping people with learning disabilities

picture of the Guide

The following is the HTML version of the above 4 page document.


There are many people in the community with learning disabilities. Because these disabilities generally affect the ability to read and write, they often go unnoticed until children begin school. The impact of such disabilities, however, has lifelong consequences.

Many students with learning disabilities do receive appropriate programs in schools. However, others remain unrecognised, undiagnosed and unsupported; they are often viewed as unintelligent and disruptive. In view of their actual ability to learn, it is tragic that so many are frustrated and misunderstood while at school.

Other students with learning disabilities do go on to further study, develop their potential and have fulfilling lives.

What are learning disabilities?

Many high school students experience learning difficulties, but a small percentage of students have a learning disability (LD) - moderate to severe problems with reading, writing, spelling, reasoning and/or mathematics, despite average to above average intelligence. Such learning problems are not the result of sensory, physical or emotional problems, intellectual disability or a detrimental educational or personal history.

Indicators of LD

Research on adolescents and adults with LD indicates that they:

As well, these students often devise coping strategies which mask their learning disabilities. For example, behavioural and emotional problems may arise and thus create greater concern for parents and teachers than the underlying learning disability.

What can be done to help students with LD?

Student learning is frequently enhanced by

Students moving from high school to university

Compared to high school, success at university involves adjusting to:

Recent research

A recent Brisbane study (Smith and van Kraayenoord, 1994) funded by Tertiary Initiatives for People with Disabilities and by the Graduate School of Education at The University of Queensland looked at the experiences and difficulties of 22 tertiary students with possible learning disabilities. Many people (including teachers and lecturers) may be surprised that there are students with learning disabilities attending universities. However, with appropriate assessment and support, these students are studying successfully. At least three members of the group are known to have advanced to postgraduate work since the research study was completed.

What the tertiary students with LD reported

In the research study, the most frequently reported problems in tertiary education were:

Assessment and counselling should help students realise that, although some of their problems may arise from their disability, other problems are intrinsic to the challenges of tertiary study and are experienced by many other students without LD.

How secondary and tertiary teachers can assist students with LD

The following list includes those recommendations most relevant to working with high school and tertiary students with LD.

It is further recommended that:

Transition assistance

The following assistance is currently available in Brisbane to help students with disabilities make the transition to tertiary education. Available programs may change from year to year.

Griffith University

Queensland University of Technology

The University of Queensland

Tertiary Initiatives for People with Disabilities

Three booklets, Consider It and Plan For It (helping students prepare for university study) and Strategies for Teaching University Students with Disabilities are available from TIPD, telephone (07) 3864 4504 (inc. TTY), fax (07) 3864 4509.

Reference

Smith, SS, and van Kraayenoord, CE (1994). Tertiary students with a learning disability. Brisbane: Schonell Special Education Research Centre, The University of Queensland. Copies are available from Tertiary Initiatives for People with Disabilities, Queensland University of Technology.

Tertiary Initiatives for People with Disabilities (TIPD), a joint project of Queensland universities funded by the Commonwealth Department of Employment, Education, Training and Youth Affairs.
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This page last updated: 1 September, 1999