In adult literacy programs today, well-intentioned but inadequately pr
epared volunteer tutors ave being matched with learning disabled adult
students without the benefit of receiving training from experts in th
e field of language/learning disabilities. The collaboration of adult
literacy providers and learning specialists is obviously the most reso
urceful, yet most untried, solution to a problem that is plaguing volu
nteer-based programs across the country: meeting the needs of learning
disabled adults. One adult literacy program-READ/San Diego of the San
Diego Public Library-recognized that its volunteer tutors needed trai
ning in special instructional methods to tench adults who evidence lea
rning disabilities. Accordingly, the program's administrator obtained
the services of specialists to develop a learning disabilities tutor t
raining module. This article (1) presents an overview of preservice vo
lunteer training at READ/San Diego; (2) discusses informal assessment
procedures that help identify possible language/learning disabilities
in adults and provide valuable information for instructional planning;
and (3) describes selected multisensory teaching techniques designed
especially for adults who ''learn differently.''