Q1. Discuss the relationship between medical advances and the prevalence of physical disabilities.
Due to immense advancement in the field of medical science (Bureau, 2001), a number of diseases have been treated and improved especially the brain injuries and trauma cases which produce in a year more than 80,000 new generation people with a disability. Even the survival rates of less weighing babies have increased, in turn causing physical and mental development impediments (Bureau, 2001). This proves that as the medical science advances, problems like physical disabilities have also increased showing a positive correlation.
Q2. Define the three categories of physical disabilities described in the chapter (neuromotor impairments, orthopedic and musculoskeletal disorders, and other conditions that affect health or physical ability) and provide one example of each. Define each condition.
The three categories of physical disability discussed in the chapter are;
Congenital/Acquired: This classification emphasizes that the person is born with the disease or may get it due to an accident or disease. Example: Neuromonitor impairment.
Acute/Chronic/Episodic or progressive: Acute is when the disease is resolved on its own or through medication, chronic is when it recovers over a long period of time, episodic is occurring repeatedly over some time and progressive is when it increases in severity over time. Example: Muscular Dystrophy.
Other: This classifies other health related impairments causing physical disability or special gifts or talents.
Q3. Define cerebral palsy and discuss the range of effects that this condition can have on functioning.
Cerebral Palsy is related with impairment of the brain areas that control movement and coordination. It has three main kinds; rigid muscles (spasticity), irrepressible movements (choreoathetoid) and poor balance and direction (atonic). Its affect varies from person to person and the type of cerebral palsy that occurs. It majorly affects the movement, posture and balance. Some people show problems with walking, some just need help, some show intellectual disability, while in some cases the person also feels blindness or deafness. So its affect is not just constricted to muscular impediments, it also sometimes affect vision, hearing and sensations.
Q4. Describe ways that many physical disabilities could be prevented.
According to Vikaspedia (Kumar, 2014), Prevention is done on three main levels. At primary level, it is important to take action so a disability can be prevented like safety measures taken by pregnant women, regular exercising and avoiding caffeinated drinks, alcohol and smoking. Secondary is when the disability has occurred, but one tries to stop it from progressing. This can be done through, therapies and treatment. At tertiary level, minimizing the disability...
Pedagogic Model for Teaching of Technology to Special Education Students Almost thirty years ago, the American federal government passed an act mandating the availability of a free and appropriate public education for all handicapped children. In 1990, this act was updated and reformed as the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, which itself was reformed in 1997. At each step, the goal was to make education more equitable and more accessible to
Mainstreaming People who have severe disabilities have lived under centuries of legalized reliance and exclusion. With every law that showed the liberalizing of society's commitment to disabled people has come the realization by disabled people that prejudice in the community didn't really end. This discrimination continued because oppressive changes were introduced to limit society's responsibility and the few progressive changes that were introduced were never supported financially. It has become evident
Rights of Disabled Children In the United States, there are 4.5 million of youths who are considered disabled. Basically, a disabled child is someone whose age is less than or equal to 21, and who possesses physical, mental, or behavioral disorder (ERIC Digest #E456). Because of such handicaps, in terms of education, the disabled children are those who require certain amount of special assistance and attention to meet and achieve their
Nature of the ProblemPurpose of the ProjectBackground and Significance of the Problem Brain Development Specific Activities to engage students Data-Driven Instruction Community Component of Education Research QuestionsDefinition of TermsMethodology and Procedures Discussion & ImplicationsConclusions & Application ntroduction The goal of present-day educational reformers is to produce students with "higher-order skills" who are able to think independently about the unfamiliar problems they will encounter in the information age, who have become "problem solvers" and have "learned how to learn,
Krumboltz�s Social Learning Theory: Implications for DisabilityKrumboltz�s (1979) Social Learning Theory is based upon the work of Alfred Bandura whose famous Bobo doll experiments suggested that human beings primarily learn by observing and modeling other human beings, both in good ways and bad ways. Although social behavior may partially reflect the individual�s past experiences, this too is a reflection of past social baggage, observations, and what parents and teachers have
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now