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Autism Spectrum Disorders: Intervention for High-functioning Students Rhea Paul, Ph.D., CCC-SLP Southern Connecticut State University Yale Child Study Center Feb. 11-15, 2008 rhea.paul@yale.edu. Goals of Treatment for High Functioning Students with ASD. Social Interaction skills
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Autism Spectrum Disorders: Intervention for High-functioning Students Rhea Paul, Ph.D., CCC-SLP Southern Connecticut State University Yale Child Study Center Feb. 11-15, 2008 rhea.paul@yale.edu
Goals of Treatment for High Functioning Students with ASD • Social Interaction skills • Peer relations • Communication skills • Pragmatic and conversational skills • Adaptive skills • Self-help • Self-regulation, emotional regulation • Academic skills appropriate to developmental level • Reading comprehension
Social Stories • Descriptive sentences: statements of fact • Many children play on the playground during recess. • Perspective sentences: refer to internal states • Some children like to make a lot of noise. • Affirmative sentences: express a common value • One child goes down the slide at a time. • This is a safe thing to do. • Control sentences: identify personal strategies • When I have to wait my turn on the slide, I can count the people in front of me to make the time go faster. • Cooperative sentences: what others can do to help. • The teacher can help me if I feel impatient. She can talk to me while I wait.
Comic Strip Conversations • Use ‘think’ and ‘word’ bubble cartoons Sam doesn’t know as much as I do about trains. I will find out if he knows what the cowcatcher does before I tell him about the one I saw Sam, I saw a cowcatcher on an old-fashioned train yesterday. Do you know what that is?
Games Based on Special Interests • Develop social games based on special interests of target child • Involve target child in development of materials and rules • Have target child teach game to peer • Set up special opportunities to play game • Take turns choosing games to play during interactive game time
Video Modeling • Use commercial material such as My School Day • Video tape peers conducting interactions such as greeting, negotiating, etc. • Use video clips from TV shows to exemplify interactions (may use negative interaction)
Video Modeling • View video, discuss reactions • DESCRIBE VERBALLY • Re-enact scene on video with clinician • Re-enact with peer • Improvise similar situation
Using Video Modeling • Use video modeling and role playing to become aware of listener cues • Looking at watch • Taking a breath • Looking toward door • Yawning • Use role playing to practice giving and perceiving these cues
Social Cognitive Skills Training (Timler et al., 2005) • Role play social scripts in peer group • Situation paragraph read to group • 4-5 situations/ 2 hour session • 6 weeks of 2 sessions/week • Children guided during role play to use checklist to facility ability to identify what they know about situation from own and other’s perspective • Further Qs helped identify a range of response strategies by • selecting goal, • stating alternative strategies to reach goal • Evaluating consequences after response
Social Skills Groups • Can use commercial curricula, such as • Navigating the Social World (McAfee, 2001) • Skillstreaming the Adolescent (Goldstein & McGinnis, 2000) • Provide consistent group structure • Check-in, greet • Review last meeting’s skill • Introduce new skill • Model and role play new skill • Snack, social time • Activity that allows real-life practice of new skill • Summary
Peer Support Networks • Select 2-5 peers to serve as social support for student with ASD • Assign each support peer a 20 minute period/day to structure activities for student with ASD, e.g.: • Lunch: use Prompt and Praise to engage with others at table • Recess: teacher creates scripts for entering games; peer support and target student practice in private, then on playground
Effective Adult Techniques: Social Skills Training (Timler, 2006) • Teacher Redirects • Prompting children to play with one another • Rephrasing or restating one child’s statement for another • Praising children for playing together • Direct instruction in social language • Modeling and practice with explicit cues • Role play with prompting • Corrective feedback • Authentic contexts (peer involvement) • Self-monitoring for older students
Pragmatic Domains • Communicative functions • Intents • Frequency • Discourse management • Turns • topics • Register variation • Politeness • Social roles • Presupposition • Grice’s maxim of Quantity • ‘mind-reading’
Pragmatic Assessment • Children’s Communication Checklist (Bishop, 2003) • Pragmatic Rating Scale (Landa et al., 1992) • Pragmatic Rubric • Pragmatic Protocol (Prutting & Kirchner, 1984) • Social Skills Rating System (Gresham, 1990) • Pragmatic Language Skills Inventory Gilliam & Miller, 2006)
Enhancing Pragmatic Skills • Conversational participation and reciprocity • Take turns w/o interrupting • Responding appropriately to others’ speech • Adding something new and relevant information to a topic • Terminating/changing topics appropriately • Initiating and maintaining peer interactions • Entering peer play and conversation • Maintaining and expanding play themes • Terminating play appropriately • Reduction of obsessive, perseverative topics • Understanding and telling stories • Understanding social sequences • Understanding psychological motivation
Scripting • Provide explicit written script of interaction, e.g., • Walk up to a classmate • Make eye contact • Say, “Hi ____________” • Practice script w/ adult • Practice w/ peer • Script Fading: Cut off increasingly large parts of script, until client can do the scene independently
Scripts and Script Fading • Provide topic lists, guide students to write and fade their own scripts • Use favored topics to bridge to new ones • trains→dining car →food • Have students choose a strip to talk with a teacher/clinician • Fade scripts with adult • Encourage student to repeat with peer partner
Scripting with Peer Training Peers taught 5 facilitative skills w/o target child present: • Look, wait, and listen • Answer questions • Start talking • Say something nice • Keep talking Target children given written scripts for social interaction (“Can I play checkers with you?”)
Make conversation: Maintain topic: Change topic: Go up to person. Say ‘hello.’ Smile. Listen to what s/he says and respond. Listen. Think about what the person says. Talk about the same thing. Keep quiet and listen. Wait until the person pauses. Say, “Let’s talk about something else. Like…” Direct Instruction
Direct Instruction: The “Conversation Can” (Brinton, Robinson & Fujiki, 2005): • Brainstorm a list of topics classmates might want to discuss • Write each on a slip of paper • Put slips in can • Take turns pulling out a topic • Start conversation: • Think first: What should I say • Say two things about the topic • Ask interlocutor a question about the topic • Listen while interlocutor answers
Graphic Supports for Conversation • Checklists When I had a conversation, did I • Look at my friend? _____________ • Stand one arm’s length away? _____________ • Appear interested by asking questions and listening? ______ • Talk about what my friend is interested in? ______ • Posters • Important Parts of Conversations: • Topic: Pick something your friend wants to talk about • Questions: Use these to keep the back-and-forth going • Comments: Say something new that your friend doesn’t know, but would find interesting
Graphic Supports for Conversation • Choice Boards Pick your conversation topic for today:
Graphic Supports for Conversation • Choice lists Great Greetings Yo, __________! Hey, Pal! High 5! What’s up? Hi, how ya doin’!
Principles of Pragmatic Intervention Strategies • Students with ASD will not acquire social skills from exposure; they require mediated experiences • Verbal, written and graphic supports are effective • Peer involvement is an essential element • Peers need training, but it is not extensive • Encourage ‘mind reading’
Adaptive and Self-Regulatory Skills • Same principles as with lower functioning. • Visual supports • Social Stories, Comic Strip Conversations • ABA approaches • Task analysis • Functional Behavior Analysis • Consequences-natural and contrived
Self-Management Skills • Picture Schedules: visual supports
Self-management: Social Stories Recess • After lunch we go to recess. • Sometimes recess is on the playground. • A lot of the children play on the playground equipment. • It is fun to play on the playground equipment. • Everyone should play safely. • When the whistle blows that means it is time to line up and go inside. • I will try to line up as soon as the whistle blows. • This will make my teachers happy. • After I line up I will try to stay in line. • Everyone will be proud of me!
Academic Skills • Reading can appear a strength • May be early, precocious w/ keen interest in letters, numbers • May show interest in words (read dictionary) • BUT, difficulties in comprehension often occur. • Narratives (stories) may be a good vehicle for improving reading comprehension
Narrative Intervention • Understanding motives: make character motivation explicit • Understanding intentions: discuss reasons for actions • Understanding emotions: discuss how characters feel and why