What it is
A formal exceptionality, identified by an Identification Placement and Review Committee (IPRC), in the category of Intellect, based on a psychological diagnosis characterized by below-average intelligence.
See the teaching strategies for these related areas of student need:
• Anger/Frustration Management Skills
• Articulation Skills
• Assistive Technology
• Attention Skills
• Emotional Regulation
• Executive Function
• Fine Motor Skills
• Gross Motor Skills
• Intellectual Ability – Low
• Listening Skills
• Memory
• Metacognitive Skills
• Non-Verbal Reasoning
• Organizational Skills
• Personal Care
• Personal Safety
• Phonological Processing
• Processing Speed
• Self-Advocacy Skills
• Self-Esteem
• Self-Regulatory Skills
• Sensory Integration Skills
• Sequencing Skills
• Social Skills
• Task Initiation
• Time Management Skills
• Transition Skills
• Verbal Ability
• Visual-Motor Skills
• Visual-Spatial Processing
• Anger/Frustration Management Skills
• Articulation Skills
• Assistive Technology
• Attention Skills
• Emotional Regulation
• Executive Function
• Fine Motor Skills
• Gross Motor Skills
• Intellectual Ability – Low
• Listening Skills
• Memory
• Metacognitive Skills
• Non-Verbal Reasoning
• Organizational Skills
• Personal Care
• Personal Safety
• Phonological Processing
• Processing Speed
• Self-Advocacy Skills
• Self-Esteem
• Self-Regulatory Skills
• Sensory Integration Skills
• Sequencing Skills
• Social Skills
• Task Initiation
• Time Management Skills
• Transition Skills
• Verbal Ability
• Visual-Motor Skills
• Visual-Spatial Processing
Resources
• DSM-v
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition |
Document outlining criteria for intellectual diagnosis |
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What MID is and best practices. |
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Strategies and characteristics for students who are slower learners, provided by the Special Needs Ontario Window (SNOW). |