2.7 Categories and Definitions of Exceptionalities
Subsection 8(3) of the Education Act requires the Minister of Education
to define exceptionalities of pupils, prescribe categories of exceptional
pupils and to require school boards to employ such definitions. An Identification,
Placement and Review Committee (IPRC) of a school board uses the categories
and definitions to identify the specific needs of a pupil in order to
ensure that an effective individual education plan may be developed
for the pupil. Regulation 181/98, which governs the Identification,
Placement and Review Committee process, contains a requirement for an
IPRC to include the category and definition of any exceptionalities
in its statement of decision when a pupil is identified as exceptional.
This section will provide an overview of the
Ministry categories of exceptionalities and definitions.
BEHAVIOUR
A learning disorder characterized by specific behaviour problems
over such a period of time, and to such a marked degree, and of such
a nature, as to adversely affect educational performance, and that may
be accompanied by one or more of the following:
a) an inability to build or maintain interpersonal
relationships;
b) excessive fears or anxieties;
c) a tendency to compulsive reaction; or
d) an inability to learn that cannot be traced
to intellectual, sensory or other health factors, or any combination
thereof.
COMMUNICATION
Autism
A severe learning disorder that is characterized
by:
a) disturbances in:
· rate of educational development;
· ability to relate to the environment;
· mobility;
· perception, speech, and language.
b) lack of the representational symbolic behaviour
that precedes language.
Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing
An impairment characterized by deficits in language and speech development
because of a diminished or non-existent auditory response to sound.
Language Impairment
A learning disorder characterized by an impairment in comprehension
and/or use of verbal communication or the written or other symbol system
of communication which may be associated with neurological, psychological,
physical, or sensory factors, and which may:
a) involve one or more of the form, content,
and function of language in communication; and
b) include one or more of the following:
· language delay;
· dysfluency;
· voice and articulation development,
which may or may not be organically or functionally based.
Speech Impairment
A disorder in language formulation that may be associated
with neurological, psychological, physical, or sensory factors; that
involves perceptual motor aspects of transmitting oral messages; and
that may be characterized by impairment in articulation, rhythm, and
stress.
Learning Disability
A learning disorder evident in both academic and social situations
that involves one or more of the processes necessary for the proper
use of spoken language or the symbols of communication, and that is
characterized by a condition that:
a) is not primarily the result of :
· impairment of vision;
· impairment of hearing;
· physical disability;
· developmental disability;
· primary emotional disturbance;
· cultural difference; and
b) results in a significant discrepancy between
academic achievement and assessed intellectual ability, with deficits
in one or more of the following:
· receptive language (listening, reading);
· language processing (thinking, conceptualizing,
integrating);
· expressive language (talking, spelling,
writing);
· mathematical computations;
c) may be associated with one or more conditions
diagnosed as:
· a perceptual handicap;
· a brain injury;
· minimal brain dysfunction;
· dyslexia;
· developmental aphasia.
INTELLECTUAL
Giftedness
An unusually advanced degree of general intellectual
ability that requires differential learning experiences of a depth and
breadth beyond those normally provided in the regular school program
to satisfy the level of educational potential indicated.
Mild Intellectual Disability
A learning disorder characterized by:
a) an ability to profit educationally within
a regular class with the aid of considerable curriculum modification
and supportive service;
b) an inability to profit educationally within
a regular class because of slow intellectual development;
c) a potential for academic learning, independent
social adjustment, and economic self-support.
Developmental Disability
A severe learning disorder characterized by:
a) an inability to profit from a special education
program for students with mild intellectual disabilities because of
slow intellectual development;
b) an ability to profit from a special education
program that is designed to accommodate slow intellectual development;
c) a limited potential for academic learning,
independent social adjustment, and economic self-support.
PHYSICAL
Physical Disability
A condition of such severe physical limitation or deficiency as to require
special assistance in learning situations to provide the opportunity
for educational achievement equivalent to that of pupils without exceptionalities
who are of the same age or developmental level.
Blind or Low Vision
A condition of partial or total impairment of sight or vision
that, even with correction, affects educational performance adversely.
MULTIPLE
Multiple Exceptionalities
A combination of learning or other disorders, impairments, or physical
disabilities, that is of such nature as to require, for educational
achievement, the services of one or more teachers holding qualifications
in special education and the provision of support services appropriate
for such disorders, impairments, or disabilities.