Litcius/Paper detail

Teaching Students With Mild Intellectual Disability to Solve Word Problems Using Schema-Based Instruction

Irene Polo-Blanco, María José González López, Andrea Bruno, Jon González‐Sánchez

2021Learning Disability Quarterly23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This study, which used a multiple baseline across participants’ design, examines the effectiveness of a modified schema-based instructional approach to improve the mathematical word problem solving performance of three students with mild intellectual disability, two of whom had an autism spectrum disorder. Following the intervention, the three students improved their performance when solving addition and subtraction change word problems; however, their performance was inconsistent on change word problems. The effects of the instruction were generalized to two-step addition and subtraction word problems for the three participants. Moreover, the results were generalized to an untrained setting and were maintained 8 weeks after the instruction. The implications of these findings for teaching problem-solving skills to students with intellectual disability are discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Schema (genetic algorithms)Multiple baseline designIntellectual disabilityPsychologyLearning disabilitySubtractionAutismSpecial educationAutism spectrum disorderMathematics educationTeaching methodIntervention (counseling)Developmental psychologyComputer scienceArithmeticMathematicsPsychiatryMachine learningCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsBehavioral and Psychological StudiesAutism Spectrum Disorder Research
Teaching Students With Mild Intellectual Disability to Solve Word Problems Using Schema-Based Instruction | Litcius