Description
http://www.epilepsy.com/learn/epilepsy-101/what-epilepsy?gclid=Cj0KEQiAsNyxBRDBuKrMhsbt3vwBEiQAdRgPsqOXQHBC9IqUJLhTMxsakhszUZD2G1Rs_7jauVUyn4gaAm6D8P8HAQ
Indicators
Unpredictable - you often can't predict when and where a seizure may happen
Episodic - seizures can come and go
Brief - usually last only seconds to a few minutes
Stereotypical - symptoms are similar whenever they occur
Symptoms include:
- "Blackouts" or periods of confused memory
- Episodes of staring or unexplained periods of unresponsiveness
- Involuntary movement of arms and legs
- "Fainting spells" with incontinence or followed by excessive fatigue
- Odd sounds, distorted perceptions, or episodic feelings of fear that cannot be explained.
Now consider the different feelings or behaviors that may occur at the beginning, middle or end of a seizure. Sometimes these symptoms may be considered a warning to a seizure or are part of the seizure itself.
http://epilepsy.emedtv.com/epilepsy/epilepsy-symptoms.html
Accommodations
- Extended time for assignments and tests
- Special transportation (this provides seat belts as well as an aid on the bus to assist if the student has a seizure in transport
- Rest periods (this is often necessary after a seizure)
- Lunch in an alternative setting (only if the student struggles with sticking to a special diet)
- A personal paraprofessional may be needed for a student who has many seizures in a day and could be injured by his/her surroundings
- Cuing
- Activities to focus less on retrieval of information and more on recognition tasks
- Expose them to the new information as often as possible
- Individual instruction- one-on-one tutorials can support the regular curriculum by addressing the same themes and topics multiple times
- Test for understanding rather than specific facts
http://www.examiner.com/article/epilepsy-basics-and-school-accommodations
http://edmedkids.arizona.edu/content/educational-implications-1