Why can't I learn like everyone else? : kids with learning disabilities / by Sheila Stewart and Camden Flath.

By: Stewart, Sheila, 1975-Contributor(s): Flath, Camden, 1987-Material type: TextTextSeries: Kids with special needsPublication details: Broomall, Pa. : Mason Crest Publishers, c2011Description: 48 p. : ill. (chiefly col.) ; 25 cmISBN: 9781422217269 (hardcover); 1422217264 (hardcover); 9781422219294 (pbk.); 1422219291 (pbk.)Other title: Kids with learning disabilitiesSubject(s): Learning disabled children -- Education -- Juvenile literature | Learning disabilities -- Treatment -- Juvenile literatureDDC classification: 371.9 LOC classification: LC4704 | .S755 2011Summary: "For kids with learning disabilities, school can sometimes be a very frustrating place. There are many different types of learning disabilities, but they all make it difficult for a person to learn. Kids with learning disabilities sometimes think they must not be very smart, but this isn't true at all. A learning disability might make it a lot harder for someone to read or do math, but that has nothing to do with how intelligent he is. Understanding the causes and effects of a learning disability, as well as ways to overcome it, are important for kids dealing with these types of disabilities--and it is also important for people who know someone dealing with them"--Cover, p. 4.
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Hard Covered Materials Hard Covered Materials MACHAKOS UNIVERSITY LIBRARY
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LC 4704.S755 2010 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) Available 24333

Includes bibliographical references (p. 45-46) and index.

"For kids with learning disabilities, school can sometimes be a very frustrating place. There are many different types of learning disabilities, but they all make it difficult for a person to learn. Kids with learning disabilities sometimes think they must not be very smart, but this isn't true at all. A learning disability might make it a lot harder for someone to read or do math, but that has nothing to do with how intelligent he is. Understanding the causes and effects of a learning disability, as well as ways to overcome it, are important for kids dealing with these types of disabilities--and it is also important for people who know someone dealing with them"--Cover, p. 4.

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