Handbook of Learning Disabilities

Third Edition

Edited by Cynthia M. Okolo, Nicole Patton Terry, and Laurie E. Cutting

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Hardcover
December 26, 2025
ISBN 9781462559077
Price: $93.00
621 Pages
Size: 7" x 10"
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December 26, 2025
ISBN 9781462559060
Price: $62.00
621 Pages
Size: 7" x 10"
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December 26, 2025
PDF and Accessible ePub ?
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621 Pages
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This definitive handbook is now in an extensively revised third edition, including many all-new chapters and new topics. Foremost experts review the breadth of current knowledge about learning disabilities (LD), from core psychological and neurobiological processes to evidence-based instruction. Chapters describe best practices in identifying and supporting students with difficulties in reading, writing, math, and other content areas. Service delivery models that support differentiated instruction and data-based decision making are examined, and ways to meet the needs of specific populations, including English learners with LD, are explored. Prior edition editors: H. Lee Swanson, Karen R. Harris, and Steve Graham.

New to This Edition

“From MVPs in the field, the third edition of this handbook should be required reading for researchers, teacher educators, and teachers. The volume addresses advances in topics covered in previous editions while introducing such timely topics as progress monitoring, preventing and ameliorating reading disabilities among English learners, trends in dyslexia legislation, and preparing teachers to provide evidence-based instruction for students with LD. The editors have pulled off an impressive feat by including a wide breadth of issues without sacrificing depth.”

—Jade Wexler, PhD, Department of Counseling, Higher Education, and Special Education, University of Maryland, College Park


“Okolo, Patton Terry, and Cutting continue in the tradition of Swanson et al. to provide a current, comprehensive picture of the field of LD. The third edition captures updated perspectives on genetics and neurobiology, language and cognitive processes, measurement and classification, instructional practices, educational technology, and policy. Notable new topics include MTSS and social–emotional learning, reflecting the field’s growing complexity and responsiveness to real-world educational challenges. Contributors thoughtfully examine the shift toward dimensional models of classification and emphasize the need for equitable access to high-quality instruction as a foundation for fair LD identification.”

—Nicole Landi, PhD, Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Connecticut

About the Editors

Cynthia M. Okolo, PhD, is Professor Emeritus of Counseling, Educational Psychology, and Special Education at Michigan State University. Her research focuses on technology and literacy for students with mild disabilities, universal design for learning, and history instruction for students with learning challenges. Dr. Okolo is a former special education teacher, and her scholarship is rooted in applied issues related to instruction in inclusive classrooms. She has played a leadership role in numerous state, regional, and national boards and organizations, has directed undergraduate, master’s, and doctoral programs, and has been a frequent contributor to the scholarly literature as an author and editor. Dr. Okolo is a recipient of the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Council for Exceptional Children.

Laurie E. Cutting, PhD, is the Patricia and Rodes Hart Professor of Neuroscience in the Departments of Special Education, Psychology and Human Development, Radiology, Pediatrics, and Electrical and Computer Engineering at Vanderbilt University. She is also Associate Director of the Vanderbilt Kennedy Center, a member of the Vanderbilt Brain Institute, and training faculty for Vanderbilt’s Neuroscience PhD program, and was the recipient of the 2017–2018 Joe B. Wyatt Distinguished University Professorship. Dr. Cutting is currently serving a two-year term as Associate Provost in the Office of the Vice Provost for Research and Innovation. Her work focuses on brain–behavior relations in children and adolescents, with a particular emphasis on academic and cognitive development.

Nicole Patton Terry, PhD, is the Olive and Manuel Bordas Professor of Education in the School of Teacher Education and Director of the Florida Center for Reading Research (FCRR) at Florida State University. She is the founding director of The Urban Child Study Center at Georgia State University and The Village at FCRR, two research entities where researchers collaborate with school and community partners to promote student success. Dr. Patton Terry’s work focuses on young learners who are vulnerable to experiencing difficulty with language and literacy achievement in school, in particular, African American children, children growing up in poverty, and children with disabilities. A former special education teacher, she currently serves as president of the Society for the Scientific Study of Reading and is a Fellow of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association and the American Educational Research Association.

Audience

Special education researchers and practitioners working with students at all grade levels; school and clinical psychologists; teacher educators and graduate students.

Course Use

Serves as a core or supplemental text in graduate-level courses.
Previous editions published by Guilford:

Second Edition, © 2013
ISBN: 9781462518685

First Edition, © 2003
ISBN: 9781593853037
New to this edition: