Regional Autism Advisory Council of
Southwest Ohio (RAAC-SWO)
RAAC Training Committee 2011
The Basics of Autism Spectrum Disorders
Training Series
Training Series Modules
Module One: Autism Defined, Autism Prevalence and Primary Characteristics
Module Two: Physical Characteristics of Autism
Module Three: Cognition and Learning in Autism
Module Four: Getting the Student Ready to Learn
Module Five: Structuring the Classroom Environment
Module Six: Using Reinforcement in the Classroom
Training Series Modules
Module Seven: Autism and Sensory Differences
Module Eight: Sensory in the Classroom
Module Nine: Communication and Autism
Module Ten: Communication in the Classroom
Module Eleven: Behavior Challenges and Autism
Module Twelve: Understanding Behavior in Students with Autism
Training Series ModulesModule Thirteen: Social Skills in the School
Environment
Module Fourteen: Functional Behavior Assessment
Module Fifteen: Working Together as a Team
Module Sixteen: Autism and Leisure Skills to Teach
Module Seventeen: Special Issues of Adolescence
Module Eighteen: Safety and Autism
Module Nineteen: Special Issues: High School, Transition, and Job Readiness
Training Series ModulesModule Twenty: Asperger Syndrome: Managing
and Organizing the Environment
Module Twenty-One: Asperger Syndrome: Addressing Social Skills
The Importance of Engagement in Learning
Students with autism and intensive needs may miss opportunities for engagement from infancy because of the underlying characteristics of their autism (difficulty imitating actions or words of others, poor eye contact, shows little interest in response to praise, prefers alone activities).
Research has shown that active engagement is the best predictor of academic outcomes for students with disabilities. (Bulgren & Carta, 1993; Iovannone, Dunlap, Huber & Kincaid, 2003)
Big Idea
Active engagement in meaningful learning experiences
is crucial to student success.
What is Engagement? Some Examples of Engagement:
Eye contact
Reaching to others
Pointing to desired object
Handing someone a book with desire to read
Clapping in response to an echo game
Says “moo” when singing Old MacDonald in response to “a cow says…”
Strategies for Building Engagement
Floor play
One on one structured table work
Using demand fade
Floor Play: Building Social Interactions
This is about building a relationship with a student and beginning where the student is:
• Sit near the student to build his/her comfort
• Positively comment on his/her activities
• Gradually join the activity
• Seize opportunities to build on his/her activities (introduce new ways of playing with the toy)
• Gradually increase length of interaction and expand
More Social Interaction Strategies for Engagement
Engage in fun play routines several times, then PAUSE and wait for the student to reinitiate the routine.
Use repetitive phrases or songs and have the student anticipate what is going to happen.
Attempt to entice the child with motivating items.
“Play dumb” and have the child take the lead and show you.
Floor Play Helps to Build Social Interactions
Set-up the classroom to provide lots of opportunities for the student to have to communicate to you for them to get what they want/need. For example:
- favorite toys are on a high shelf
- cups for juice are kept in the closet, out of sight
Build in many opportunities during the day to build reciprocal, or back and forth social skills.
- games of imitation
- structured turn-taking games
Big Idea
Engagement starts with developing a relationship with
the student, on his or her terms, meeting the student where he
or she is.
Structured Table WorkUse Visual Supports (activity schedules,
first/then and token boards)
Use heavy reinforcement for activities and reinforce frequently, especially when it is new.
Develop activities that are highly structured (known beginning, middle, end, and time to every activity).
Make sure everyone in classroom is doing the exact same thing with student (write it down).
Make sure to write down when a student has success or difficulty with the activity (keep data).
Structured Table WorkFirst Skills to Teach:
- Joint Attention (Student is looking at the activity/task along with you.)
- Imitation (Repeating your visual or physical actions.)
- Play (Includes back and forth social interaction or mutual play)
- Appropriate protesting/rejecting (activities that are not liked or
preferred)
Joint Attention Strategies
Teach responding to gestures, head turns and eye gaze
Prompt getting an object
Teach use of gestures, head turns and eye gaze
Follow another’s focus of attention (“look at that”)
Use gestures to bring attention to objects
Use gestures to comment on something unexpected (look at that monkey dancing)
Big Idea
Initially respond to all communication attempts and then increase expectations to more specific or appropriate
communication.
Basic Play and Interaction Skills
Play Skills to Teach:
Attending to play activity
Appropriate sitting
How to move objects (object manipulation)
Matching (pictures and objects)
Open-ended activities (non-structured play)
Imitation with objects
Motor imitation (touch toes, run in place)
Simple direction following
Basic Play and Interaction Skills
Teach Appropriate Ways to Protest/Reject
“All done”
“Stop”
“No”
“Take a break”
Teaching “Break”Introduce and teach the steps to take a break.
Teach and use a “break” card, especially for students who do not have verbal communication
Demonstrate the steps to take a break.
Decide on a “Break Area” and set the amount of time for a break.
Student must come back to the activity/task after the break is over
Use lots of reinforcement when student follows the steps.
Teaching “Wait”Introduce and teach the steps to “wait”.
Teach and use a “wait” card, especially for students who do not have verbal communication.
Start with VERY short periods of time and gradually increase
Practice “wait” with student, gradually increasing time for waiting.
Use a token board and high rates of reinforcement, especially when first teaching and practicing “wait”
Importance of Imitation
Teaching imitation relies on the fact that the student can do what you do.
If a child does not have social attention, then imitation will not occur. You must then work on joint attention more.
Teaching students to watch others and do as they do helps them to learn to use objects and toys for functional (and meaningful) purposes, imitate facial movement needed to make sounds, and follow along with the group. (Wetherby & Prizant, 1992)
Teaching ImitationStep One: -Simple actions (i.e. block in bucket, ring on stacker) - Complex actions (i.e. roll car on table, stack blocks)
Step Two: -Related actions (i.e. put man in car and roll, put baby in cradle and rock) - Unrelated actions (i.e. put block in bucket and ring on stacker)
Step Three: - Related action with theme-based toy (i.e. farm,
doll house)
Generalization or Extension of Imitation -Pretend play with props (i.e. kitchen play)
- Peer imitation - Learning by watching
(Harris & Weiss, 1998)
Teaching Motor ImitationOne-Step Commands:
-Large or gross motor in chair (i.e. clap hands, stomp feet) - Gross motor out of chair (i.e. jump) - Small or fine motor (i.e. point, make a fist) - Facial (i.e. stick out tongue, shut eyes)
Two-Step Commands: -Related commands (i.e. stand up and jump)
- Unrelated commands (i.e. clap and touch nose)
Three-Step Commands: - (i.e. stand up, jump and clap hands)
Peer Imitation
Generalization or Extension of Imitation - Actions to songs, obstacle course, imitation
games such as “Simon Says” (Harris & Weiss, 1998)
Demand Fade: Definition
Demand Fade is a behavioral approach on working with a student to learn a new skill,
a skill that has not been mastered and needs practice, or a task that is not
liked/preferred by the student.
Steps in Using Demand Fade
1. Break the task into its smallest parts
2. Using a visual support, show the “first work, then break” framework
3. Use high levels of reinforcement
4. Gradually develop the student’s capacity and stamina for work
5. Reinforcement gradually be lessened as the student progresses
6. This method should be used for new or difficult tasks for the student.
Big Idea
It is very important to find what motivates the student, use high
levels of reinforcement when skills are being taught, and then
lessen the frequency of the reinforcement as the skill is used independently by the
student.