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Abstract. In many intervention techniques, we rely on children's imitation of our modeled communication behaviors when prompted. For young children with severe expressive impairments who have difficulty producing verbal or nonverbal imitation in response to a direct partner model, we need strategies to indirectly elicit the target behaviors. This session uses videos and demonstrations of alternative strategies to elicit children's productions using situational and indirect temptations for behaviors that minimize the role of direct imitation..
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1. Getting Beyond Imitation for Young Children with Severe Expressive Impairments Cynthia Cress, Ph.D.
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
2007 ASHA presentation, Boston MA
2. Abstract In many intervention techniques, we rely on children’s imitation of our modeled communication behaviors when prompted. For young children with severe expressive impairments who have difficulty producing verbal or nonverbal imitation in response to a direct partner model, we need strategies to indirectly elicit the target behaviors. This session uses videos and demonstrations of alternative strategies to elicit children’s productions using situational and indirect temptations for behaviors that minimize the role of direct imitation.
3. I. Who may have trouble with imitation? A. Children who don’t imitate our models when prompted (verbal or nonverbal behaviors):
Speech/motor control issues (e.g. apraxia of speech)
Attention issues
Pragmatic issues (e.g. turns, expectations)
Cognitive issues
Autism spectrum (e.g. relating to partner’s actions)
Communication style or perceived difficulty
4. I. Who may have trouble with imitation? B. Children who imitate too well, or only when prompted:
Autism spectrum issues
Sensory issues
Prompt dependency
Poor generalization of skills
Pragmatic issues
Communication style or perceived difficulty
[clips of Anthony: poor initiation of imitated skills]
5. I. What we may not be able to teach: C. Spontaneous imitation for communication
“Radar” for watching and incorporating useful actions for a purpose
Both children with too little and too much imitation tend to be poor at spontaneously using imitated skills to communicate a message (though they may echo)
Experience at seeing the usefulness of new actions for accomplishing purposes may help to build the child’s sense of “radar”, but this is rarely something we can teach directly
Comfort with “trial and error” learning will also help promote spontaneous imitation
6. D. What makes traditional imitation hard? Adult initiated action
Expectation of child response
Limited timing and nature of response
Specific motor initiation problems
Knowledge that speech is a hard skill
“You’re not telling ME what to do”
7. II. How else can we elicit target behaviors? A. Make use of the environment and task to tempt target behaviors or approximations
B. Emphasize physical or social play activities that elicit target behaviors spontaneously
C. Embed our models into following the child’s intent
D. Pair vocal and nonvocal behaviors in simple play
E. Practice embedded models of behaviors the child is already good at, gradually insert harder actions
F. Make sure we’re only working on “one hard thing at a time”
G. Target speech behaviors no more than one step harder for a given activity from what children spontaneously produce
Remember: It’s more important that the child produces the behavior for a purpose and sees its effect than that they do it because we told them to do it
8. A. Make use of the environment and task to tempt target behaviors Produce the behavior for an immediate purpose
Make a toy or social interaction work
Embed or create into a social routine
Use activities that naturally encourage target behaviors or behaviors that can be shaped
Reduce emphasis on the behavior and increase focus on accomplishing the goal
Let the routine or activity signal to the child when it’s their turn to act rather than direct prompting
[Ben/Tyler clip - Two purposes of imitating]
9. B. Emphasize physical or social play that elicits target behaviors naturally Bouncing, tickle, swinging, social routines tend to elicit spontaneous sounds
Play with vibrating toys & large motor acts.
Prime the vocal system with tactile or vibrating stimulation to face and throat
Use books with repeated events or rhymes; attach simple sounds to pictures
Parallel talk or contingent vocal imitation (Adult imitates or puts words to child acts)
Minimize expectations for the child to imitate the adult
If children are not yet aware that their behaviors have meaning, we need to reinforce spontaneous behaviors
10. C. Embed our models into following the child’s intent (translation) When the child makes gestures or sounds respond to these as meaningful.
When the child produces a gesture but not a sound, adult adds the sound on top of their response as it is happening
Give sound cues during interactive stories, or paired with events/gestures.
Pause to give the child a turn (with gestural ways of participating too)
Exaggerate the target or misarticulated sounds.
Provide tactile feedback for child sounds
Pair tactile prompts with sounds to cue the child, once they vocalize.
Model words or sounds at opportunities, but don’t make the child response a second requirement of the task
11. D. Pair vocal & nonvocal actions in simple play Work on sounds “sideways” without focusing on the sound as the target action
Adult pairs simple play actions with sounds (e.g., saying “ba” while dropping objects into container)
Build sounds into social routines.
Always give the child a nonverbal way to take a turn and gradually add the vocal part
If you’re targeting a word and getting no vocal behaviors, simplify the sound paired with the action (e.g. let’s play “ooh”)
To reinforce more complex sounds, make results of difficult sounds more interesting than easy ones
12. E. Start with easy or stimulable actions Inventory spontaneous sounds and then practice those in activities.
Practice embedded models of behaviors the child is already good at,
Gradually insert harder actions within the same routine
Vary expectations of sounds or actions, three easy ones to one hard one
Addition of the “ie” or “y” endings to words may make them easier to say (final consonants tend to be harder)
Make relatively harder sounds or actions receive more interesting responses
13. F. One hard thing at a time If a task is a new communication skill, make it easy in other ways.
Motorically - Socially - Motivation
Cognitively - Attention - Language (known word)
Expectations - Timing -Teaching strategy
If we’re working on a difficult communication skill (e.g. learning how to comment), we need to use a behavior that is already a strong skill and gradually generalize this to harder behaviors.
If we’re working on speech skills, it’s OK to have simple or repetitive activities, since motor practice is an important factor in learning a physical behavior like speech.
Make sure to position the child appropriately with support for speech and/or gesture activities
14. G. General complexity of speech goals Reflexive sounds-interpreted by adults.
-Cry/burp to coo/goo to vocal play
Reactive sound making in interactions
Goal is making sounds when child wants to
Vowels usually, or simple consonants /fff/
Activity-triggered sound making & play
Goal is increasing variety of sound repertoire
Includes vowel combos (uh-oh) and consonant/vowel
Communicative sound making
- Goal is associating sounds with purposes
- Vowel combos and consonant/vowels with meaning
- Can be babbling with intonation (e.g. question vs. comment)
15. III. Overview of Embedding Incidental Imitation: Tempt/Trigger Model Tempt: Adapting the activity, partners, and environment to naturally elicit behavior
Trigger: Individual’s spontaneously initiated behavior (current skill)
Translate: Associating a new form or function of behavior immediately after the individual produces their current behavior
Touch: Tangible and immediate feedback of the successful behavior and its outcome
17. 2. Trigger: Trigger the communicator’s existing behaviors before prompting what’s next
Communicator-initiated response to temptation, not starting with an adult-initiated model
Follow the individual’s interest to trigger what they can already do
We can cue the individual to focus on a particular behavior without directly prompting
Any outcomes or prompts need to be embedded into the activity and context
18. 3. Translate. Translate the existing behavior into a more conventional or complex one without any extra work on child’s part
Respond directly to the individual’s existing behavior as meaningful (even if inferred)
Provide functional and social outcomes of the behavior as you help the child produce new action
Prompt with behaviors, touch, and activities more than verbal prompts when possible
Scale back translation to simpler vocalization or gesture if we can’t translate more complex actions
19. 4. Touch Make our cues and feedback concrete and direct within the individual’s experience
Interpreting verbal cues and feedback can add its own cognitive load and processing
Touch as feedback helps children realize which behavior successfully got the response
Touch as cue helps us focus the person’s attention on relevant behaviors without prompts
For touch-sensitive individuals, other behavioral or attention cues can be equally concrete
20. IV. Coaching Parents One hard thing at a time for parents too
Suggest one new strategy to try at a time (e.g. make silly sounds with tickle)
Some parents are used to relying on imitation as a primary teaching strategy
Some parents may not rely on “radar” to recognize and respond to child actions
Some parents may see working on “fixing their speech” as our job
21. A. Why may parents rely on imitation? Modeling is clear evidence of teaching that the adult can control
Imitation is the only reliable way to elicit the correct response the adult intends
We are used to relying on imitation with other children
It’s easy to see quick results if it works
We may not see the difference between the surface behavior and the intent
22. B. Why can embedded strategies be hard? We may not be aware of meaningful behaviors beyond the “correct” target
It isn’t real unless it’s speech
It involves changing aspects of how we do normal routines and play
It requires thinking about several things at once
Results may be gradual and not perceived as change
We’re making it “too easy for the child”
We don’t feel in control of the situation
23. Contact Information: Cynthia J. Cress, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
University of Nebraska-Lincoln
202G Barkley Memorial Center
Lincoln, NE 68583-0732
(402) 472-4431
ccress1@unl.edu
Website: www.unl.edu/barkley/faculty/ccress.shtml