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Helping Your Child Navigate Through Today's Social World: Social Thinking Workshop Customized for Parents Strategies for Home and School. Social Thinking Workshop Customized for Parents l Strategies for Home and School. Knowing what and how to say it..well that’s another story....M.G.W.
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Helping Your Child Navigate Through Today's Social World: Social Thinking Workshop Customized for Parents Strategies for Home and School • Social Thinking Workshop Customized for Parents • l • Strategies for Home and School
Knowing what and how to say it..well that’s another story....M.G.W Talking is the easy part!!
Who is Michelle Garcia Winner? • Specializes in the treatment of individuals with social cognitive deficits. • She began teaching “social thinking” in 1995 as a speech language pathologist and entered private practice in 1998. Internationally recognized, Congressional Award • Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders published research supporting her methods for the treatment of students with Asperger syndrome and high-functioning autism. • Social thinking was born out of a necessity as a way to reach those “bright buy socially clueless students”
M.G.W. • Began company called “Think Social Publishing, Inc.” to handle growing demands of speaking internationally as well as self-publishing her own and now other’s books. • www.socialthinking.com Check it out!!! • The heart of her work is illuminating the often elusive and intangible world of social thinking, and developing practical strategies that can be easily used by parents, educators and services providers, across different environments to teach social thinking.
Observations..... • Lack of generalization into the classroom and other settings.... • Lots of superficial skills, but no understanding of how and why... • Over dependent on prompts, adult directed... • Assumption that social thinking only affects lunch, recess, and play..... • Academic problems increasing in upper grades
Social Thinking vs. Social Skills • Social thinking is the why and how • Social skills rule taught, scripting. It is a subset of social thinking. • examples: compliments, topics,eye contact vs reading eyes and gaze
Social Thinking: An Intelligence? • The social component of our intelligence is important at home and school. • There are not standardized test that measure it fully, We need to become better observers. • Social communication issues impact academics and often become more evident in the upper grades.
SOCIAL THINKING SKILLS ARE... • Deeper than just conversation rules.Such rules are related, but not the sole focus. • ‘’Social thinking knowledge is NOT just the delivery of isolated or rote learned sentences that have been drilled without context. It is not a performance.” MGW • It is the ‘how’ and ‘why’ skills are important rather than just teaching rules and scripts. • It has vocabulary that can be shared with parents, teachers, vocational and independent living coaches.
Social Thinking Across Settings • Social thinking plays into our academic world, requiring us to think about the motives and intentions of people we read about in literature and history. It enables problem solving and planning. Critical thinking and analysis calls upon Social Thinking. • Social thinking affects us in adulthood. To hold a job, most of us have to adapt our own social behavior based on the perceived thoughts of the people we work and live with.
CENTRAL COHERENCE CENTRAL COHERENCE (Firth,1989)-child with ASD have difficulty conceptualizing the whole picture. They tend to think in parts and do not easily see connections, patterns of thought such as the main, interpretation of communication, environment information,analysis, summarizing,written expression. Can over focus on details.
Executive Function Theory • ( McEvoy,Rogers, Pennington 1993) - students with social • cognitive deficits have challenges planning, creating organizational structure, being flexible, prioritizing, solving problems
THEORY OF MIND • Ability to intuitively track what others are know and think during personal interactions • Ability to use this information to understand and monitor our own responses-verbal and non-verbal-in the presence of others. • It is PERSPECTIVE TAKING • Reading and Sally-Anne
MGW - “deficits in Perspective Taking skills accounts for the most significant challenge faced by students with social cognition deficits” • every form of interpersonal interaction • understanding literature • understanding socially based themes in history,texts, movies • writing ( analysis,point of view, persuasive etc) • problem solving, hidden curriculum of motives, intentions) • Coping with problems, differences, changes
Intiation- not just starting a conversation, communicating out side of the routine, self-advocating, joining groups. • Listening with Eyes and Brain- listening is more than hearing, whole body helps us focus, watch non-verbal cues. Often kids are highly technically visual, but not highly social visual. • Abstract-Inferential Language- Communication is often indirect. Understanding of idiomatic and elaborate language. Vocabulary connotations, inferences. Inferences are taking what you know and you making a guess. Missing subtle meanings can lead to anxiety. • Understanding Perspective- awareness of other peoples thoughts and knowledge, points of view, regulate behavior and language accordingly. Empathy, misinterpreting intentions. Writing and reading. • Gestalt-Getting the Big Picture- Random comments, over focus on detail affects pulling together information parts to get the main idea. organization steps, communication is the ‘whole’ of many rules/parts. • Humor-has a time and place, teasing vs being mean, subtleties.
WHAT ARE “GOOD” SOCIAL SKILLS? • The ability to adapt effectively across all contexts, regardless of whether the person is engaged in social interaction. • Sharing physical space with other effectively • Following the unwritten social rules • More than direct language based interactions
What are ‘‘good” social skills? con’t • Thinking about others in your environment • Regulating your behavior in response to other peoples thoughts and behavior • Being a flexible thinker • Knowing the expected behavior • Conversation skills are just part of it.
Successful social thinkers consider the points of view, emotions, thoughts, beliefs, prior knowledge and intentions of others. • We can determine the meanings behind the messages communicated by others and how to respond to them within milliseconds to three seconds! • The approach requires students to learn to think about thinking in their play, classrooms, social relationships, work settings, community, etc.
Joint Attention in Young Children May emerge in some infants at 6 monthsReliably established between 9 and 12 monthsUsing pointing to direct gaze or following others’ gaze are examples of joint attentionIt is more than two people looking at the same object at the same time.Each has to be aware of, and monitoring, the attention of the other.Teaching young children with ASD to engage in joint attention shown to lead to increases in other non targeted behaviors e.g. play, imitation, language, social initiations and empathy (Whalen, Schreibman and Ingersoll, 2006)
Areas affected by social thinking Perspective taking / Theory of MindSocial Communication/Problem SolvingConversation Emotional Regulation/ Sensory Issues leading to inflexibilty, frustration, outburst.Generalized anxiety
#1-THINKING ABOUT PEOPLE: KEEP YOUR THOUGHTS ON YOUR COMMUNICATIVE PARTNER • Be aware of those around you • What are they interested in? • What do they feel about what you are saying? • What are you doing to show you are interested in them when they are talking?
#2 - BE AWARE OF YOUR PHYSICAL PRESENCE AS WELL AS THE PHYSICAL PRESENCE OF OTHERS • Your body position shows whether you want to talk or not to talk • Your body movements show what you plan to do next. Your body movements communicate messages to people even when you are not trying to communicate • Your body language and facial expressions tell people about how you feel about things or people around you
#3- USE YOUR EYES TO THINK ABOUT OTHERS AND WATCH WHAT THEY ARE THINKING ABOUT.............. • The direction of your eyes and other peoples eyes lets people see what other people might be thinking about. • We use our eyes to help figure out how people feel, what they are thinking and if they are interested in the other people that they are with.
#4-USE YOUR LANGUAGE TO RELATE TO OTHERS • Talk about things that are interesting to others. • Ask questions to find out about people. • Make comments to show you are interested. • Listen with eyes and ears to determine what people are really trying to say. • Add your own thoughts to connect your experiences to other peoples experiences.
Four Immediate Steps to Perspective Taking • I think about you. • I think about WHY you are near me. What is your intent? • You think about what I am thinking about you. • I monitor you and modify my behavior to keep you thinking about me the way I want you to think about me.
TEACH INTENTIONS • Teach that ALL communication has a purpose, therefore speakers have intentions ( characters, historical figures, scientists, writers etc) . Non-verbal messages ( actions, body language) also show intention. • Social thinking includes constantly being aware of others INTENTIONS • Students must first be able to read people’s physical plans by watching ( e.g. getting ready to go out, reaching for door handle)
SOCIAL THINKING VOCABULARY • Concepts and terms that can consistently be used across environments • Home,schoolincluding academics, play, social experiences • The idea is to generalize the concepts and help the student see connections.
Be aware of the........... Hidden Curriculum • "HIDDEN CURRICULUM" is a term to used to describe the unwritten social rules and expectations of behavior that we all seem to know, but were never taught (Bieber, 1994). • Examples, hygiene, different teachers have different rules, don’t point out mistakes, don’t bring egg salad to lunch. • Unawareness causes anxiety, behavior issues, and vulnerability to teasing and bullying.
Big problem/Little problem ? • Scale 1-10 or 1-5 visual • List what type of problem is 10, 5, 1 • Discuss descriptions of problems and determine where they fit on scale • Define what makes a problem big or small • What types of emotions are associated with different levels of problems? • Discuss how different problem levels impact a situation over time. • Discuss how to sort out and analyze that little problem • Discuss own emotions
‘THINKING WITH YOUR EYES’ • THINKING WITH YOUR EYES - Your eyes are ‘tools’ that help you figure out your environment and what other people might be thinking about. It puts the emphasis on the students becoming good observers and to use the clues to make smart guesses about what other people might be thinking about. They are encouraged to use this information to adapt their thinking, words, and behavior. If you use your eyes to look at a person, it makes them feel that you are thinking about what they are saying or doing.
WHOLE BODY LISTENING • SELF MONITORING • BODY AND BRAIN IN GROUP
THINKING OF YOU VS. THINKING OF ME • GOOD THOUGHTS - WEIRD THOUGHTS
GUESSING • SMART GUESSES- This is when we use all of our tools to figure things out and then make guesses based on what we know about the world. • WACKY GUESSES- If we forget and don’t think about what we know and see,then we just make a random guess without having any information.. As we learn in school, our teachers do not expect us to make wacky guesses.
missed cues THESE STUDENTS NEED TO HAVE LANGUAGE NUANCES TAUGHT MORE EXPLICITLY LITERAL LANGUAGE -is like cement and concrete. It stays the same all the time. FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE - your brain has to figure it out. It does NOT mean exactly what it says. You must make a “SMART GUESS” based on the person or situation. **Use commonly idioms and explain them. Use them repeatedly in your talking with your child.
SOCIAL CURIOSITY • TEACH IMAGINATION AND WONDER OF OTHERS AND THE WORLD
PEOPLE FILES- CREATE A SOCIAL MEMORY • These are visual ways to help kids with social thinking deficits understand that we all continue to learn information about others and file it in an organized way in our brains; we recall this information later when we see that person again. We create people files when we see or meet someone for the first time. We create people files for literary characters which helps us understand their feelings, motivations, and behaviors.
‘THe Boring moment’ • “This is boring!” • The world does get boring at times. Learn how to put up with it. ( They will need it to hold a job later) “There will probably be a boring moment in our schedule today. Your job will be to try and listen and not distract the others when it happens”. • Announce “there will be a boring moment during our visit”
“THE FAKE” • Don’t be appalled, we all do this! • The intuitive ability of persons with good social skills to appear to be interested in another person’s words, when actually they are not that interested.
LESSON CORE BELIEFS • Don’t just teach lessons from a training manual. Add real life -spontaneity. Use the students in your group/class/home- get them to explore a new approach/concept . • Showing them a picture and role-playing is not enough. Look for carry-over opportunities. • Social Thinking groups are not “Friendship Groups”. Help them decide for themselves who their friends are- the How and Why.
SOCIAL THINKING TEACHING ..... • USE HUMOR!!!! • Exaggerate, draw attention to what you are teaching. • Make mistakes ( perfectionism can create anxiety and get in the way of flexible thinking) • Use you personal experiences. • Let them hear your thinking! (perspective, background knowledge, reading others etc)
Introducing Social Thinking Conceptsincludes basic vocabulary...
Comic Strip Conversations Use quick drawings with thought bubbles and word blocks. Show how the thoughts are affected by words, actions of others etc.
Let’s Talk Flexibility!!! MGW • Build in flexibility early!! • Schedules should not be rigid- teach the student that real life has road bumps so build them into you day - remember rigid thinking can become an obstacle to learning and relationships. • Teach the “BORING MOMENT” • Teach “THE FAKE INTEREST” we all do it because we know it makes others feel better.