Slides Social Interactions
Slides Social Interactions
Slides Social Interactions
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Autism Documentary
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Consequences of Poor Social Skills: 70% of
Understanding why this happens those on the spectrum are unemployed
Activity 1
Stand Up!!
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Informal Assessment
Informal Assessment: Observations What is keeping the student from establishing and
What are you looking for? maintaining social relationships?
Proximity: appropriate space • Rate social competence: interviews and rating scales
Object/body use • Take date: during recess observe # of social initiations,
# of social responses, and amount of social engagement
Requests
time
Initiations • Conversations skills: Initiations, responses, maintenance,
Responses closure of social interactions (various settings)
Behaviors: do they interfere • Cooperative play skills: joining in, taking turns, sharing,
Transitions losing, games
• Friendship skills: proximity, appropriate topics, helping,
Participation in routine or novel situations
rules, bullies, grooming
• Emotions: understanding emotions, problem solving skills
• Empathy
• Conflicts: anger, respect, NO,
Difficulty handling transitions, shifting from one mindset or task to another (shifting cognitive set)
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___
___
Difficulty doing things in a logical sequence or prescribed order
Poor sense of time
Skill Acquisition Deficit: skill is absent
___ Difficulty reflecting on multiple thoughts or ideas simultaneously (will need to teach)
___ Difficulty maintaining focus for goal-directed problem-solving
___ Difficulty considering the likely outcomes or consequences of actions (impulsive)
___ Difficulty considering a range of solutions to a problem
___ Difficulty expressing concerns, needs, or thoughts in words Performance Deficit: skill is in repertoire
___ Difficulty understanding what is being said
but the child does not use the skills
___ Difficulty managing emotional response to frustration so as to think rationally (separation of affect)
___ Chronic irritability and/or anxiety significantly impede capacity for problem-solving (enhance performance)
___ Difficulty seeing the “grays”/concrete, literal, black-and-white, thinking
___ Difficulty deviating from rules, routine, original plan
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Difficulty handling unpredictability, ambiguity, uncertainty, novelty
Difficulty shifting from original idea or solution/difficulty adapting to changes in plan or new rules/possibly preservative or obsessive
Can the student do the skill with different
___ Difficulty taking into account situational factors that would suggest the need to adjust a plan of action people in different settings?
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How to start planning and begin
Goal Selection
instruction?
5 Steps Goals should be functional and
Identify and assess areas of need applicable to success in life
Discern between skill acquisition Ensure goals are appropriate for
deficits and performance deficits cognitive levels
Select appropriate intervention Goals should be positive
strategies
Goals should be realistic and
Implement intervention strategies
represent a challenge
Evaluate program and modify as
needed Set criteria based on baseline data
*Source: Bellini, 2007
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Some more thoughts on
Anxiety
by Jerry Newport Your Life Is Not a Label
“As far back as I remember, I was like a little bird
on a wire, ready to flee from the next
embarrassment at a moment’s notice. No matter
Fear and Anxiety are
how hard I tried to obey all the rules, spoken by
parents with frustration and siblings with
common feelings for people
sarcasm, I knew I would eventually screw up and
tread water in another sea of laughter. with ASD.
So, my stress and perhaps yours, came from many
sources: frustration, neurological overload, and
social humiliation to name a few.
There is nothing more frustrating than the lifelong
accumulation of scars that result from trying to
be like normal people and failing daily. It is
especially hard when your disability is invisible
like mine.”
5 Point Scale
Kari Buron and Mitzi Curtis
Examples
tool which provides a visual representation
of stressors, inappropriate behaviors,
rules, etc..
www.5pointscale.com
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Developing a Plan Relaxation Plans
Identify stressors 1. Help students regulate stress- teach
Recognize student to request a break, include
behaviors leading breaks in schedule, create break area
up to aggression or in classroom, coping strategies
shut down specific to situations
Create supports, 2. Use self-monitoring- 5 point scale,
area, or a plan with checklists, power cards
the student 3.Tension release and breathing
exercises – yoga, deep breathing
cards,
Social Interaction Skills “The Effectiveness of an Interview Template in Children with Autism: Structured Peer Interview to Facilitate Peer-
peer Interactions” Crooke, Pamela J. (2005)
Intervention Strategies
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Role-Playing: acting out and
Role-Play practicing newly learned skills
The students act out the skills in the appropriate Teaching students to:
order.
1. Read nonverbal cues
The teacher acts as a hands on coach. 2. Conversation skills
3. Social rules (interrupting, eye
Use scripted and unscripted
contact, gaining attention, amount
Keep it fun
of information, etc…)
4. Sequence interactions
Let the students pick scenarios or practice use
units from class readings or other subjects
Requests for Actions/Objects: requests an action (e.g., Responding: commenting about events in an activity,
“Can I have a turn?”), requests an object (e.g., “Can I have a greeting, when others invite child to play, when others
marker?”), tells a peer what action to do or not to do (e.g., request, when others ask questions
“Stop it”, ‘Put it in there.”)
Nonverbal cues: Understanding facial expressions (e.g.
Commenting: express an opinion (e.g. “I think we should eyebrows raised mean surprised), Understanding body
start.”), response to a peer’s action (e.g. “You’re done.”), language (e.g. arms crossed when angry
express enjoyment or frustration (e.g. “Oh no!”)
Thiemann, K. & Goldstein, H. (2004). Effects of Peer Training and Written Text Cueing on Social Communication of Thiemann, K. & Goldstein, H. (2004). Effects of Peer Training and Written Text Cueing on Social Communication of
School-Age Children With Pervasive Developmental Disorder. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 47, School-Age Children With Pervasive Developmental Disorder. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 47,
126-144. 126-144.
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Reciprocal Strategies (learning
back and forth exchanges)
Reciprocal Questions
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Discrete Trial
•Cue
•Response (behavior)
Consequence (reinforcement)
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Social Skill Picture Stories
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Power Cards
Power card
help change an unwanted or inappropriate
behavior by capitalizing on the special interests Front of power card has the logo on it.
that characterize children and youth with AS. A Back of power card
brief, motivational text related to a special The contestants on Survivor think everyone
interest or a highly admired person is combined should have fun playing games. They also want you
to remember three things when playing games
with an illustration and made into a bookmark- with other people:
or business card-sized POWER CARD that the Games should be fun for everyone.
student can refer to whenever necessary. For If you win a game, you can: Smile, give high fives,
younger children the special interest or hero is or say, "Alright!"
worked into a brief story. If you lose a game, you can: Take a deep breath
and say, "Good job" to the opponent or say,
"Maybe next time."
Structured Learning
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Promote Social
Performance
Peer sensitivity Peer Mentoring
training Self-Monitoring
Reinforcement/mo Relaxation plans
tivation Prompting
Priming Video modeling
Modifications Social narratives
Game playing
Increase
opportunities
(practice)
Self-Monitoring
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Prompts continued Video Modeling
VERBAL CUES Includes videos that
depict appropriate target
• Visual – a written cue that elicits a behaviors and/or videos of
response themselves performing the
desired behavior
• Partial Verbal – stating part of/or “One Key reason for the
the initial sound of the verbal success of video modeling
is that it increases the
response you are expecting. (“What child’s attention to the Courtesy of Indiana University
http://modelmekids.com/autism-video-
samples.html
Reinforcement/Motivation Reinforcement/Motivation
Increases desired behaviors should receive praise and social reinforcers, even
when receiving a more tangible reinforcer.
The type of reinforcer must be appropriate and
natural to the activity the student is doing and to
Forces us to monitor student’s the level of student understanding.
behavior Reinforcement can include a variety of items or
activities. Give the student CHOICES.
The teacher needs to make sure the reinforcing
Provides feedback to student consequence immediately follows the behavior or
skill being learned or increased so that the
relationship between the two is clear to the
student. However, be careful to not interrupt a
social interaction.
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Priming Modifications
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Considerations for Social
Interaction
Continued
Reduce Aberrant Behaviors Prior to Initiating
Match Social Interaction Programs to Students' Social Interaction Programs
Needs and Settings.
Provide Ongoing Instruction and Monitoring
Establish Reasonable Social Interaction
Expectations Task Analyze Social Interaction Skills
Be Sensitive to Local Social Interaction Norms Consider the Importance of Setting and Material
and Conditions Variables
Program for Interaction Quality As Well As
Consider Social Validity in Programming
Quantity
Recognize That Not All General Education Prioritize Social Interaction Skills
Students Will Be Suited to Social Interaction
Tailor Reinforcement to Meet Individual Needs
Programs
Educate Tutors and Others About Autism When first beginning – make sure the
Facilitate Initial Interactions level of understanding is
commensurate with all students
Make Data-Based Program Decisions
Review the purpose of the group
Generalize Social Skills
Establish group rules and
Maintain Acquired Social Skills reinforcement/consequences
Get to know each other through
discussion and/or worksheet inventories
Game or snack time
Set and display a schedule for the Prepare a visual of the agreed upon
group: group rules
Talk Time Listen to each other (wait for a pause to talk
SkillTime during a conversation, raise your hand and
Game Time
wait to be called on during skill time).
Talk nicely to each other (do not yell, tease, or
Snack
insult).
All Done
Keep hands and feet to yourself (do not push,
hit, kick, pinch, or grab others).
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Social Skills Groups Cont. Social Skills Groups
References
Bellini, S., akullian, J., & Hopf, A. (2007). Increasing social engagement in young
children with autism spectrum disorders using video self-modeling. School
Psychology Review, 36, 80-90
www.speakingofspeech.com
Bellini, S. & Akullian, J. (2007). A meta-analysis of video modeling and video self-
modeling interventions for children and adolescents with autism spectrum www.usevisualstrategies.com
disorders. Exceptional Children, 73, 261-284.
www.do2learn.com
“The Effectiveness of an Interview Template in Children with Autism: Structured
Peer Interview to Facilitate Peer-peer Interactions” Crooke, Pamela J. (2005)
Thiemann, K. & Goldstein, H. (2004). Effects of Peer Training and Written Text
Cueing on Social Communication of School-Age Children With Pervasive
Developmental Disorder. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, www.thegraycenter.org
47, 126-144.
Buschbacher, P. & Fox, L. (2003). Understanding and Intervening With the
Challenging Behavior of Young Children With Autism Spectrum Disorder.
www.tinsnips.com
Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 34, 217-227.
Teacher's Toolbox. "Teacher's Toolbox." . . . 11 September 2007. www.teacch.com
<http://www.ttoolbox.com/help.htm>.
www.mrsriley.com
Susan Klein. "Model Me Kids." . 2004. Model Me Kids®, LLC.. 11 September 2007.
<http://www.modelmekids.com/index.html>.
Fovel, T. (2002). The ABA Program Companion.
Bashe, P. & Kirby B. (2001). The Oasis Guide to Asperger Syndrome-Revised.
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