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AccessAbility Day 5: Article Summary- Educating Students With FASD: Linking Policy, Research, and Practice

Background
Children with Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorders (FASD) experience a range of cognitive disabilities, including learning and intellectual disabilities. Therefore, they often require special education strategies and programs in schools. In this study, Millar and colleagues (2017) have conducted a literature search on the prevalence of FASD in school-aged children and the impact of FASD on learning, followed by an overview of policy and practice of special education strategies and programs in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada within last 18 years.

Main findings

Recommendations

Take-home message
School-aged children with FASD experience challenges in academic achievements, learning, memory, cognition, and communication, among other learning and behavioral disabilities. As the support and education needs of children with FASD are unique and different than other neurodevelopmental disorders, they require FASD-specific special education programs and strategies within the classroom.

Authors: Julie A. Millar, Janet Thompson, Dorothy Schwab, Ana Hanlon-Dearman, Deborah Goodman, Gal Koren, and Paul Masotti

Journal: Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs

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