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Inclusion of students with autism spectrum disorders (ASD)
NJEA ConventionNovember 2015
Presented by Karen Umstead BCBABeautiful Minds of Princeton
Beautiful Minds of Princeton“Teach, Reach, & Expand Potential”
For more information:Call: 1-800-675-2709
Email: [email protected]
or Visit us: www.beautifulmindsofprinceton.com
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This workshop is sponsored by the New Jersey Council for Exceptional Children (NJCEC)
Please take the handouts from the NJCEC that can be found on your chairs or up at the front of the room.
Please use our sign-up sheet to request more information and/or take a flyer regarding how we can help you
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This workshop is sponsored by the New Jersey Council for Exceptional Children (NJCEC)
SAVE THE DATE!!NJCEC Annual ConferenceMonday, March 14th, 2016
Ramapo CollegeMahwah, NJ
This is a "PARCC-free" / No Assessment Date!!www.njcec.org
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Check us out in the exhibit hall where we have a booth.•Have an opportunity to talk more in-depth with our various presenters during our “Meet the Expert” times.•Get more handouts and info related to serving exceptional children•Find out more details about our conference coming up.
www.njcec.org
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Layman’s DefinitionA developmental disability that:
• Signs of it appear early in life (usually within first 3 years of life, recent changes in diagnosis allow later)
• a spectrum of abilities that range from mild to severe• New DSM V has 3 levels of severity
• mainly affecting in areas dealing with:• social interaction• communication• leisure or play skill
Each child is different and presents a different combination of symptoms and severity
Social Interaction• Poor eye contact
• Awkward body positions/walk
• Looking at an object rather than pointing
• Not interested in making friends or interacting with people their own age
• Existing in their own “world”
• Lack of interest in others or world around them
• You say “How are you?” and then they do not respond or after answering do not reciprocate asking how you are
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Communication• Nonverbal, making only grunts or noises
• Unable to start a conversation
• Does not understand the give and take involved with conversing with someone
• Repeating commercials, movies, or what you just said to them; answer to “how are you?” is always fine
• Doesn’t play kitchen/ house or with dolls/cars
• Difficulty with turn-taking, lack of “imagination”
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Stereotypic Behaviors• Always talking about shoes, rubber bands, dinosaurs etc
• Throws tantrum if a different route is taken home, store, school,
• Always has to have book bag in specific place or sit in same seat
• Repeated hand-flapping, spinning, rocking, etc
• Rather than play with car, plays only with wheels, spinning them
• Takes an object and uses it so twist/spin rather than it’s given function e.g. taking drumstick and turning it in fingers in a circle rather than hitting drum with it)
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Asperger’s Syndrome (Now falls under Autism)
Traits (Burgoine and Wing 1983)• Lack of empathy• Naïve, inappropriate one-sided social interaction• Little or no ability to form friendships• Pedantic, repetitive speech• Poor non-verbal communication• Intense absorption in certain subjects• Clumsy, & ill-coordinated movements and odd postures
Positive Descriptors
• Honest• Reliable• Determined• Dedicated• Great memory• Attention to detail
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Possible Things you may see
• Hard to distinguish fiction/reality• Special interests• Enjoys routines• Difficulty reading social cues and body
language• Can be perfectionist about work products
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Possible Things you may see
• Can have high levels of stress/anxiety• Difficulty reading others/expressing
emotions• Perspective-taking difficulties• Literal thinker• Trouble with the gray areas (black/white)• Strong moral code/sense of justice
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Possible Things you may see
• Rigid, inflexible thinking• Planning ahead difficult• Difficulty generalizing• Sensory issues (hyper/hypo)• Visual/Auditory processing
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AbilitiesStrengths:
• Numbers &/or Math• Memorization• Routines• Pay close attention to detail • Concentrate for very long
periods of time on one thing • Typically visual learners• Reading (decoding)• Honest/genuine• Perfectionist
Weaknesses:• Appropriate language• Impulsive• Reading comprehension• Social skills &
comprehending social cues• Inflexible• Sensory processing• Eye Contact• Play skills• Obsessive• Sometimes delayed reactions
This is not an exhaustive list and each child has different strengths and weaknesses.
Fair & Equal
• Fairness does not mean that everyone gets the same thing
• Fairness is everyone gets what he or she needs.
• If someone needs glasses to see, we don’t expect everyone to use glasses.
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Comprehensible/StructuredLearning Environments
Program is structured when: the curriculum (activities, schedule, environment) is clear (i.e., comprehensible) to both the students and the educational personnel.
Allows a student with ASD (and others) to:predict what is currently happening within the
learning process and what will happen next anticipate requirements of specific settings learn and generalize a variety of skills
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Structuring the environment (examples)
Visual cues or supports that: Organize the instructional setting Provide a schedule of activities Carefully plan and provide choice making opportunities Provide behavioral support Define specific areas of the classroom and school settings Provide temporal relations (where things are in time or
sequence) Facilitate transitions, flexibility, and change
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Considerations of Visual Supports• Tailoring visual supports to individual
• Objects or Pictures?• Actual pictures, life-like drawings, symbolic?• Background: plain or in context• Size: small? Large? • Response effort: fine/gross motor, easy to use?• Use of assistive technology• Static (picture) vs. Animated (moving, video, etc)• How durable or portable does it need to be?
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Considerations of Visual Supports• Activity/Picture Schedules• Checklists• Color Coding• Manipulatives• Using hand gestures/signs with verbal (can be
simultaneous or highlighting a specific word/action/preposition (e.g. under))
• Try to get student to notice and follow other student’s lead
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Task Analysis
Breaking down a task into smaller components
What are the steps required to complete a task?Be specific.
The idea here is that another person could: Pick up your task analysis Perform it as written Successfully complete it.
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Task AnalysisExample: Unpacking:1. Walk in door2. Go to cubby3. Take off backpack4. Open backpack5. Take out snack6. Put snack in desk7. Hang up backpack &
coat (if wearing one)8. Sit down at desk
Example: Writer’s Workshop1. Write your name on paper2. Think about topic for 1 min3. Draw what you want to write4. Write introductory sentence5. Write 3 describing sentences6. Write conclusion sentence7. Put in writing folder8. Get book to read until
writer’s workshop is done
More StrategiesUsing Mnemonics with Pictures • Device/technique to help aide/remember a specific bit
of information (e.g. Roy G Biv)• Examples include rhymes, acronyms, & picsCan create a flip book/pictures• Can be held together via ring, binder, etc• Can show the sequence of action(s)• Each step would be a different picture (possibly with
color coding for the new step)
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Post-it Magic!
• Carry post-it’s with you to use on-the-spot• Take the task, break it down and use the
post it notes for each step (either written or picture cues)
• Use for choice-making if needed• Provide as a visual prompt (e.g. take 3 deep
breaths)
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Use special interests
Students can:• Research their favorite topic• Do an independent study• Read or write about that area• Share/present on that topic• Use as a source of motivation/hero
Signaling• Signal shows each child when to respond so that
each will give an independent response and yet all children will respond together.
• Provide the instruction first (e.g. spell the word frog) then signal
• Basic signals rules• You talk first then signal• You never signal when talking• You always pause the same length of time between the end of your
talking and the signal for children to respond
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Why Direct Instruction for ASD
• Provides a clear consistent means of instruction and signaling
• Breaks down larger concepts into smaller chunks/units
• User-friendly (aides can help do it)• Large amount of research support
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Prompting
Least to Most Prompt Hierarchy• Written• Gestural• Verbal (only use when a verbal response is
required)• Faded Physical• Full Physical
Inter-related Model
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Three Term Contingency
• Antecedent: what happens before the behavior • Ex: teacher calls on student, demand (come here) is made, peer pushes
• Behavior: ALWAYS describe in specifics (like you’re telling a blind person), only in observable terms• NO: mean look YES: stared directly in other students eyes for 10
seconds with facial muscles tensed
• Consequence: what happens after a behavior • Ex: Student sent to office, Para says do your work, student laughs
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Function of Behavior
• Look at the function (why the behavior is occurring)
• Four main functions• Attention• Escape/Avoidance• Sensory• Tangible (wants to get an item)
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Function: To GainAttention Adult or peerTangibleGetting object, activity, eventSensory StimulationVisual, Auditory, Smell, Kinesthetic,
Proprioceptive, Touch, TasteAll are maintained by positive reinforcement
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Function: To EscapeAttention Adult or peerEscape from Task, setting, object, activity, eventSensory StimulationInternal stimulation which is painful or
discomfortingAll are maintained by negative reinforcement
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Function of Behavior
• John sits down and begins tapping his pencil on the desk. The teacher starts the lesson and John continues to tap. He is asked to stop and he does. While the class is reading their novel silently to themselves, John starts to tap his pencil. Later on, during free time, John is talking with his friends and tapping his pencil on the desk.
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Function of Behavior
• There are three computers in the classroom for students to use when they finish their work. Two students are using the computer when Dylan finishes his last math problem. He turns in his paper and turns around. Another student has just sat down at the third computer. Dylan yells “This is stupid! I was supposed to go on that one! Get up!”
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Function of Behavior• During the discussion of the schedule, Daniel calls out “I
don’t like that sport. I’m not going to play it”. Staff tell Daniel to remember to raise his hand and that he needs to try the sport. Daniel replies “I’m not gonna and you’re not going to make me”. Staff reply “We can talk about this later”. Daniel shouts out “I’ll talk about it whenever I feel like it.” Staff ignores Daniel’s outburst and continues the discussion. Daniel continues to call out for another 5 minutes and then stops. The probable function of his behavior is:
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Function of Behavior• The class is lining up to go to the sports activity. Justin
says he needs to go to the bathroom. An aide takes him to the bathroom and then Justin says he doesn’t feel well and needs to see the nurse because of his eye hurting. The aide takes him to the nurse who puts eye drops in his eyes and says he is fine to go back to the class. The aide begins to walk Justin towards the gym. Justin begins crying and saying “I can’t go.” He sits down on the floor outside the gym and cries. The probable function of his behavior is:
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Competing Behaviors
• Build plan around hypothesis statement• Identify desired and alternative behaviors• Work to make behavior
• Irrelevant (antecedent) • Inefficient (teaching new skills)• Ineffective (consequence)
• A way to brainstorm strategies to address the problem behavior at different stages
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Build a Competing Behavior Pathway
Setting Event TriggeringAntecedent
Desired Behavior
Problem Behavior Maintaining
Consequence
ReplacementBehavior
MaintainingConsequence
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Shaping
Encourage approximations that are better than the one before it.
Student wants a ball:Uhhh Bbbbb Baaaa Bawwl Ball
You want the student to sit quietly during reading:Student sits 30 sec w/o talking, then 60 sec, then 2 min, 3
min, until all of reading time
Reinforcement-DefinitionAnything that increases the future probability of the behavior
occurring is considered reinforcement
Are the following things reinforcing?
M&M’s Popcorn Sesame Street
Snickers Flowers Math
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Game: “Shape that Behavior”
Veronica Volunteer loves it when people clap for her. We can shape her behavior by clapping as she gets closer to doing the desired behavior.
I need a volunteer to leave the room.
Academic Area Specifics
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Please write a sentence for each picture below
From: http://www.exploratorium.edu/brain_explorer/double.html
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Language Arts (Reading/Writing)
Strengths:• Decoding• Reading aloud• Answering who, what,
where, when questions• Basic recall• Following rules (i before e
except after c)• Using visual cues (photos)• Repetition• Spelling
Weaknesses:• Abstract concepts• Idioms or figurative
language• Understanding exceptions
to the rule• Understanding a different
point of view (perspective-taking)
• Reading Comprehension• Summarizing
This is not an exhaustive list and each child has different strengths and weaknesses.
Language Arts (Reading/Writing)
VISUAL VISUAL VISUAL1. Anaphoric cueing2. Cloze Exercises3. Sentence starters4. Choices5. Graphic organizers6. Vocabulary Journal
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Language Arts (Reading/Writing)Anaphoric cueing:Anaphoric items refer to a previous reference (most
common use is pronouns). Prompt students to label it
e.g. Wash six apples. Put THEM in a flat dish. ( six apples <= them)
Cloze Exercises:The girl went to the _____. She _____ some fruit
and then left.
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Vocabulary Building
Make the figurative more concrete.Watch your use of idiomsCreate a vocabulary journal:1. Students write down words/phrase they
don’t understand2. Have them look up the meaning or ask
others to explain it3. Have them illustrate the idiom.
Breaking down words/sentences• Consider sight words vs. phonics (e.g. Edmark)• Break down the individual phonemes of a word• Consider combining with pictures• Could have visuals of person’s mouth as they pronounce each part of the word/sentence• Consider incorporating discrete trial instruction of phonemes/rhyming words, etc
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BathB A Th
Syntax Flip Books• Use a loose leaf binder• Can chose to use pictures to accompany parts
of sentence• Each element can be flipped independently of
one another• Can incorporate a fill-in • Can color code if you like
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Breaking up sentences• Can use color coding to show different parts
• Can use “caterpillar” organizer to illustrate different segments of a sentence
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Advanced Organizers
• Give student list of questions to consider before reading a passage
• May want to make a place for student to:• Write down answers or page numbers as they
read• Any questions they have
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More Language Ideas Use visual organizers Give advance warning of important info Use projects Practice rules Use computer games Teach idioms and figures of speech Create dictionaries Use sentence completion/fill in the blank activities Use buddy system Use areas of high interest and knowledge Use outlines/guided notes
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Math/Science/Social Studies
Strengths:Memorizing fact tablesBasic computation skillsWorking independentlyTends to be high interest areaGood at memorizing facts &
dates
Weakness:Word problemsMulti-step problems/projectsGroup activitiesAnalysis & synthesis
operations difficultConceptualizing events in
different time periods
Math
• Utilize principles of Direct Instruction (Engelmann)
• Using touch points to assist with addition & subtraction (e.g. Touch Math)
• Using schema-based word problem solving
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Touch Math
• Start at the top and move down• Count 1 for each black dot• Count 2 for each “double” dot
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Graphic Columns
• Helpful for students who have difficulty keeping numbers lined up correctly
• Can use graph paper or lined paper turned sideways
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8 6
6 7
+
1 5 3
Graphic Organizing to Compare
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AdditionMultiplication
Social Studies/Science• Create a brief written overview of the chapter/unit/lesson• Use guided notes, having the students fill in the key points or
answers. • Create blanks on a page. You can photocopy a page from the
textbook and blank out certain information you want the student to learn/fill-in. You can also do this with worksheets. For answering questions, you may want to provide a starter sentence or create a fill-in.
• Keep homework assignments manageable, related to key points, etc.
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Social Studies/Science
• Color code materials/notes to make information easier to organize and process
• Allow the use of computer for note-taking, data collection, etc
• If needed, allow student to know ahead of time procedures/directions on conduct experiments or activities
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Attention & Memory Tips
Allow frequent short breaks Use different methods of instruction Encourage physical activity Prepare student before asking them to respond Provide outlines, maps, & graphs Focus on cues for important info Break tasks into smaller steps Set goals and record progress Provide consistent feedback Use visual prompts Cue upcoming transitions
Social Skills
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Going on a Picnic
• I am going on a picnic. I would love for you to come but you have to bring something.
• I am going to bring…..• What are you going to bring?
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Social Skills• Social Stories
• Direct Skill Instruction
• Hidden agenda (discuss body language)
• Fade support as soon as possible to decrease dependence
• Foster appropriate peer and staff social interactions
• Find out what they are good at and use it to their advantage (e.g. have student read to the class)
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Direct Social Skills Instruction
Key components of effective social skills instruction:Define the skillModel the skill (example & non-example)Role-playFeedback
Another way to view it: 3-D approach Discuss Demonstrate and Do (from Behavior Therapy
Associates)
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Direct Instruction
Think of a specific skill (e.g. greeting, dealing with anger, etc)
Break down the skill into steps (task analysis)Teach each of the skills Generalize across settings, staff, materials
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Following Directions
1. Listen carefully to the instructions2. Ask questions about anything you
don’t understand3. Repeat the instructions to yourself (or
the person)4. Follow instructions
From Skillstreaming task analysis of Following Directions pg. 95
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How to greet someone
1) Walk towards person2) Stop one arm’s length away3) Look at the person’s face4) Say “Hi”
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Modeling & Role-PlayModeling
• Show the correct way and the incorrect way• Modeler should “talk aloud” about the steps they
are takingRole-play
• Give students the opportunity to practice the skill• Be as realistic as possible in creating situations
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Feedback & ReinforcementFeedback
• Peers and staff should give feedback on what the role-play participants did well and areas for improvement
Reinforcement• Behavior specific praise (“That was a great job
remembering to raise your hand”, “I like the way you came and asked me for help”)
• Provide reinforcement as soon as possible after the appropriate behavior
• Make sure the reinforcement is personally meaningful to the individual
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Beautiful Minds of Princeton“Teach, Reach, & Expand Potential”
For more information:Call: 1-800-675-2709
Email: [email protected]
or Visit us: www.beautifulmindsofprinceton.com
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