Autism: Methods Of Teaching

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Transcript of Autism: Methods Of Teaching

Page 1: Autism: Methods Of Teaching

Methods of Instruction

Identifying functional target skills

Methods of instruction

Page 2: Autism: Methods Of Teaching

Review - Characteristics

Multiculturalism Functional curriculum – best practice Characteristics more severe as we look at

lower ranges of ID Zeaman & House (1963) – attending to

critical stimuli takes longer for ID Functional goals

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Group discussion

Group 1: Ethical and legal issues associated with the use of aversives Gia, Molly, Kathy, Marie, Erin

Group 2: Achievement in inclusive settings Alex, Diana, Suzanne, Missy

Group 3: Disproportionate minority Eden, Claire, Libby, Amanda

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Identifying functional target skills

Standardized tests Criterion-referenced tests Functional assessment Environmental assessment -

Ecological inventories (Snell, 1987) Informal assessments (interview & observation) Examine the environments relevant to student Totally individualized Identify functional routines and activities required

across relevant settings (home, school, work, and community)

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Ecological inventories – cont’d

Domains (Brown at al., 1979): Domestic (self-care, clothing care, housekeeping,

cooking, yard work) Community (street crossing, public transportation,

purchasing, eating in restaurant, using public facilities) Vocational (skills involved in meaningful employment) School (eating in cafeteria, using a locker, attending)

Ecological // developmental approach Encourages generalization Flexible content (not predetermined, change in

worksite)

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Ecological inventories – cont’d

Five phases of the ecological inventory process: Identify the curriculum domains Identify and observe current and future

natural environments Divide environments into subenvironments Identify relevant activities within subenvironm. Determine the skills needed to perform the

activities

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Functional Assessment

Identifies which environmental variables maintain behaviors

Functions of behavior and maintaining consequences Attention – positive reinforcement Tangible - positive reinforcement Sensory - positive reinforcement Escape - negative reinforcement

Functional analysis – manipulation of environmental factors in order to determine if they maintain behaviors (hypothesis testing)

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Learning phases Acquisition

# or % corrects Levels of assistance

Fluency Rate Latency duration

Maintenance Accuracy and fluency over time

Generalization … under nontrained conditions

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Generalization Strategies for facilitating generalization Plan for generalization!

Program common stimuli Teach sufficient (multiple) exemplars Train on-site Increase opportunities to perform skill Use natural reinforcers – intrinsic to the task (and rf.

schedules) Fade (rf., prompts, cues/task formats, have

instructional materials replaced, have setting & persons varied)

Train self-evaluation Modify behaviors of others (peers attention)

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Attentional Processes

Attentional cues – teachers’ behavior Attentional response – child’s behavior

Active – inactive/passive General – specific

Simple vs. conditional discrimination Attention problems:

Overselectivity – failure to develop responding to relevant features (restricted focus)

Perseveration – failure to sample choices Attentional shifts

Intradimensional Extradimensional

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Prompts

Stimulus prompts – cues - pretask Response prompts – prompt - task Correction prompts – post error Purpose of instruction: transfer stimulus control

from instructional to natural prompts Hierarchy of prompts: 1) Physical; 2) Model; 3)

Verbal; 4) Gestural; 5) Pictorial (+ Independent) Prompt selection criteria: most natural, least

intrusive, most effective, ease of fading.

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Methods

Methods are noncategorical How to teach (research-based) Consider pre-requisites prior to teaching Social validity (objectives, methods, outcomes) Effectiveness and efficiency Fading procedures (plan) Generalization (plan) Collect data to guide your instruction

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Methods – Time Delay “Errorless learning procedure” - < 10% errors Systematically delay the time between task

direction and controlling prompt (CTD, PTD) Teach the child to respond correctly before the

teacher’s prompt OR wait 5 types of responses

Correct anticipations (reinforced) Incorrect anticipations (error correction + wait training) Correct waits (reinforced) Incorrect waits (error correction) No response (error correction)

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Methods – System of Least Prompts Min. 3 levels of prompt hierarchy (individualize ) From independent (least intrusive) to most Final prompt is the controlling prompt Present task direction at each level Wait 5-s before and after delivery of each

prompt 5 types of possible responses Interrupt errors and move to next level Reinforce corrects regardless of level Record data

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Method – Most to Least

Min. 3 levels of prompts (lower functioning) From most to least intrusive Wait 5-s after delivery of prompt 5 types of responses Student must reach criterion at each prompt

level Probe/test at least once a day/session Mostly used with chain responses

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Method – Naturalistic (Milieu) Teaching Strategies Naturalistic time delay (PTD without 0-s delay) Incidental teaching (deprivation; SLP; elaborate) Mand-model (adult interrupts activity, asks

question, waits 5-s, models response, elaborate) Transition-based teaching (CTD without 0-s

delay; between scheduled activities) Common characteristics

Child-directed Interesting materials Natural contexts/activities Distributed trials across day/session Brief teaching episodes Contingent access to reinforcer

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Method – Graduated Guidance

Gradual presentation and removal of physical assistance, moment-to-moment decision allowing student to reach criterion with least amount of assistance (lower functioning)

Deliver task direction Present controlling prompt Gradually fade by: reducing pressure, changing

location of control, “shadowing”