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Our Goal today. Take the perspective of individuals who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing and/or Highly Visually OrientedIdentify key behaviors and social skills targeted in behavior plansShare ideas and create take homes" to apply just in time!". What Do you see?. Introduce yourself and why you
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1. Creating visual behavior plans and Intervention materials Michelle Niehaus, LCSW
2. Our Goal today
Take the perspective of individuals who are Deaf or Hard of Hearing and/or Highly Visually Oriented
Identify key behaviors and social skills targeted in behavior plans
Share ideas and create take homes to apply just in time!
3. What Do you see?
Introduce yourself and why you came
What perspective do you bring to this work?
4. What does it mean to be Highly Visually oriented?
Primary means of communication may be in American Sign Language (ASL), a manual-gestural system, or gesture
Individuals may have dysfluent language due to developmental or intellectual disabilities or cognitive disorders
Students may be primarily visual learners and benefit from these techniques
5. Why should we consider making behavior plans themselves HVO? Teachers, parents, and ARC members want students to follow the plans
.how well are the plans actually communicated to the child?
As higher levels of learning and responsibility are expected, behavior plans must go beyond rewards and consequences so that students learn why they are to do certain things and what results
Expectations lowered help no one. (Goethe quote)
Other ideas?
6. What about language levels? The example of Dialectical Behavior Therapy
Highly complex treatment program
Adapted to three levels of language
Key Concepts
Mindfulness Skills
Interpersonal Effectiveness Skills
Getting What I Want / DEAF CAN
Taking Care of Relationships
Emotional Regulation
Model for Describing Emotions
7. Activity Time! Working with the DBT Materials for Warm Up In small groups, take a packet of DBT materials.
Divide your packet into the three language levels. Compare and contrast how they are similar and different.
Choose one of the key concepts. Together, think about how they would apply to your students and teaching them to be emotionally well-adjusted.
Think of one student in particular who would benefit from this kind of information. Work together to adapt the materials to his/her level. Be prepared to share! Note: Work together on one students needs. Youll get time to work alone later!
Choose a spokesperson from the group to summarize your discussion to the whole group.
8. I want my students to be able to
The benefit of working backwards
.
9. Right now, _________ gets in the way
10. Activity : Building on the ______ Think of an individual student you have who has a behavior plan.
Identify the _______ that gets in the way.
Some people may call this anger, inattention, etc.
Visually represent this getting in the way.
Think about how you would describe this orally, in sign language, and with your visual to your student
Individually
With his/her parents
In an ARC meeting
Be prepared to share!
11. How do conversations about the behavior usually go? Discussion
.
12. Reframing behavior problems as skills not yet learned
Or as
13. I want my student to be able to
Demonstrate what skills? (Or replace
)
Have what positive outcome for themselves if they do this (motivator)
ACTIVITY!
Thinking of the steps needed to get there, create a visual representation of the positive behaviors the child will show when the skill is attained
14. How do I put that in an iep? Thats great, but
15. Activity! In teams of two, review your work so far. Now put the steps developed in the last activity into teacher-terminology. How would you write it in an IEP?
How would you use the visual plan to describe the problem and its possible solutions in an ARC meeting so that all better understand the students perspective?
16. Use of Visual metaphor for teaching
20. What Visual Metaphors Work for Your Students? Youre Turn!
21. Open Forum time for collective intelligence
22. Michelle niehaus, LCSW(502) 564-4456 x4521(502) 564-4000 (VP)Michelle.niehaus@ky.gov Keep in Touch!