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http:// www.youtube.com/watch?v=bllazKRgwHM http://vimeo.com/70794074. Updates. Tonight!- Task Analysis #2 & Quiz #3 March 4 th - Ecological Assessment Report & Quiz #4 March 11 th - PLAAFP Assignment. Agenda. Review & Quiz Discussion of Chapter 11 OR Autism I nternet Modules
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bllazKRgwHM • http://vimeo.com/70794074
Updates • Tonight!- Task Analysis #2 & Quiz #3 • March 4th- Ecological Assessment Report & Quiz #4 • March 11th - PLAAFP Assignment
Agenda • Review & Quiz • Discussion of Chapter 11 OR Autism Internet Modules • Literacy for Students with Developmental Disabilities • Alternative/Extended Assessments • Writing Goals- Linking to the Common Core • Evidence-based practices within UDL framework
General Case Design— Why?Determine what to teach and features need to varyto increase generalization. 1. Define the Instructional Universe 2. Define the Range of Relevant Stimulus and Response Variation 3. Select Examples for Teaching & Testing 4. Sequencing Teaching Examples 5. Teaching the Examples 6. Testing with Non-trained Probe Examples
General Case Programming 1. Define the instructional universe (IU).---How? -Person-Centered Planning/ File Review/ IEP 2. Define the range of relevant stimulus & response variation within that IU.— -How? -Task Analysis 3. Select examples for the IU for use in teaching and probe testing.—How? Positive & Negative Examples 4. Sequence teaching examples.---How? Juxtapose maximally different, then minimally different examples. 5. Teach the examples.---How? Using Antecedent & Consequence Strategies 6. Test with non-trained probe examples— How?
Stimulus Control • Stimulus control refers to change in the likelihood of a response when a stimulus is presented. • The stimulus is a signal that if the response is performed, a predictable outcome (consequence) is likely. • If a person responds one way in the presence of a stimulus and another in its absence, than that stimulus is said to “control” behavior. • A traffic light is an example
Stimulus Control • Stimulus control refers to change in the likelihood of a response when a stimulus is presented. • The stimulus is a signal that if the response is performed, a predictable outcome (consequence) is likely. • If a person responds one way in the presence of a stimulus and another in its absence, than that stimulus is said to “control” behavior. • A traffic light is an example Antecedent/Stimulus: Green Light Behavior: Drive or walk across the street
Teaching and Stimulus Control • Define the naturally occurring pattern • Setting Event -> Stimulus -> Response -> Consequence • Define what you will “add” to assist learning. • Setting Event -> Stimulus -> Response -> Consequence Prompt Extra Reward or Correction
Instructional Concept #3 Range of Examples Show all the possibilities
Effective Instruction • Effective example selection and sequencing • Task analysis • Facilitate success • Delivered at the level of the student Effective instruction is:
Instructional Concept #4 Logical Sequencing Juxtapose positive and negative examples
= osh = osh = osh INEFFECTIVE INSTRUCTION INEFFECTIVE MODELS INEFFECTIVE PRACTICE - TESTING OUTCOMES - = osh = osh FAILURE Osh = ?
= osh = osh = osh = not osh EFFECTIVE INSTRUCTION EFFECTIVE MODELS EFFECTIVE PRACTICE - TESTING OUTCOMES - = osh = osh = not osh SUCCESS Osh = RED SIDED RECTANGLE
Step 1- Defining the Instructional Universe • Jeremiah’s team (Mom, Dad, Jamal, etc.) decided that they wanted him to become independent at putting on his clothing (socks, shoes, shirt, pants): • 1. In school (P.E. and other activities). • 2. Activities at home with family members. • 3. Activities in the community (swimming, soccer, tennis).
Step 2- Identify the Range of Stimulus & Response variation in the Instructional Universe • Range of stimulus (Antecedent) variation • 1. Activities at school • What can vary? Times of day, activities (difficulty, interest, setting) peers, staff • 2. Activities at home • What can vary? Activity (interest, chore, recreational), Parent home • 3. Activities in community? Soccer, Tennis, coaches, peers, etc. • Range of behavior (putting on clothes) variation • Uses adaptive equipment (for help with buttons) • Putting on shirt • Putting on pants • Putting on shoes
Step 3- Select examples • Positive examples of successfully putting on clothes • 1. Putting arms & head through correct holes on shirt • 2. Putting on socks • 3. Putting on correct shoe(s)- Left and Right • 4. Putting on pants with the zipper in the front • Negative examples of putting on clothes • 1. Putting arm and/or head in wrong holes (and/or unbuttoned) • 2. Socks on inside/out • 3. Incorrect shoe on foot • 4. Pants on backwards (and/or unzipped or unbuttoned)
Step 4- Sequence examples • May teach with the following sequence: • Positive example #1: Successfully putting head through correct hole in shirt. • Positive example #1: Successfully putting arms in correct holes in shirt. • Negative example #1: Arm in hole where head should go. • Negative example #1: Shirt on backwards… • Etc……
Step 5- Teach examples & provide tools to increase independence • Use prompts and reinforcers to improve performance. • Example for Jeremiah • Provide modifications for student- including hook for buttons and zippers. • Visual prompts or markings on clothes for where head goes, arm goes • Video modeling of this showing from his point of view • Use chaining to teach all skills together • Discrete Trial Training to teach individual skills: identifying where head goes, identifying where arm goes
Antecedent: Natural Cue that triggers [or should trigger]…. Behavior you want to Increase or Decrease Consequence: Natural outcome that consistently occurs after behavior Antecedent Strategies -Time Delay -Prompting -Pre-correction -Modeling Consequence Strategies -Differential Reinforcement -Shaping -Error Correction Instructional Design -Range of Responses -Range of Examples -Positive Examples -Negative Examples -Minimally Different -Maximally Different
Step 6- Test in non-trained setting • After success with multiple stimuli in trained situations, test within an un-trained situation (example: tennis [if not used in training] OR different restroom [if not used in training])
General Case Design— Why?Determine what to teach and features need to varyto increase generalization. 1. Define the Instructional Universe 2. Define the Range of Relevant Stimulus and Response Variation 3. Select Examples for Teaching & Testing 4. Sequencing Teaching Examples 5. Teaching the Examples 6. Testing with Non-trained Probe Examples
Practice case(s) • Student has difficulty eating his lunch due to motor skills issues (student uses a motorized wheel chair and has a tray on his wheel chair where he puts his plate, utensils, etc.) • Team wants him to be able to: • Acquire his utensils (spork, other utensils??) • Acquire his lunch (including main dish, side, and drink) • Open his drink (open milk carton and/or use straw) • Use his fork to spear his food • Use napkin to clean his face • Throw away food and clean his tray
Literacy Instruction for Individuals with Autism, Cerebral Palsy, Down Syndrome, & Other Disabilities • http://aacliteracy.psu.edu/
Oregon’s Extended Assessment • Alternate assessments designed specifically for students with significant cognitive disabilities. • Decision to administer is made by the IEP team • Based on alternate achievement standards with content that is reduced in depth, breadth, complexity, • test results from these assessments are not comparable to results achieved on the state’s general assessment • http://www.ode.state.or.us/search/page/?id=2691
Oregon Extended Assessment • Online there is an administration manual, FAQs for parents, scoring guides, sample tests. http://www.ode.state.or.us/search/results/?id=178 • A training and proficiency website is located at: http://or.k12test.com • This website is used by all assessors as part of the qualification process to become a Qualified Assessor (QA) or Qualified Trainer (QT).
Overview of Extended Assessment • Subject areas of Reading, (No longer doing Writing), & Science. • Organized into 3 grade levels • Elementary (grades 3-5) • Middle (grades 6-8) • High (grade 11) • Mathematics- each grade (3rd -8th , & 11th ) has a unique test
Extended Assessment Format • 2 administration formats provided for each grade level: • Standard & Scaffold administration • Each test begins with a “Prerequisite Skills “ task • Followed by 10 content-level Tasks referred to as the “Content Prompts”. • Each Content Prompt Task consists of up to 5 test items.
IEP team decision-making • General Assessment • Standard Extended Assessment • Scaffold Extended Assessment
General Assessment if… • Performs at or around grade level • Difficulties primarily in reading, but other subject areas fall within the normal range • Is reading within two to three grades of his/her enrolled level
Standard Extended if… • Student well below grade level in reading • Academic difficulties are generalized (all subject areas) • Benefits from specialized individual supports • General curriculum must be significantly reduced in breadth, depth, & complexity
Scaffold Extended Assessment if… • Performance is significantly impacted due to the nature of disability • Does not read • Has academic, mobility, receptive, & expressive language difficulties that are generalized relies on individual supports & adaptations to access reduced content materials.
Look at some examples • Form groups with one person in each group that has a sample of: • Math • Science • Reading • Writing • Discuss the test items, scoring, & difference between Standard & Scaffold administration items
Assessing Academic Skills • How would you assess reading for a student that does not use oral communication? • Math? • Science? • Etc.? • Standardized Tests???
Discussion • Chapter 11 • Or • Autism Internet Module
Writing Goals- Linking to the common core • http://functionalworksample.pbworks.com/w/page/49912525/Writing%20IEP%20Goals%20%20Objectives
Qualities of a Well-Designed Standards-Based IEP (modified from Wakeman et al., 2010)
Using Goalbook • https://goalbookapp.com/ • Use Goal Wizard for your student OR browse goals.
General Case Design— Why?Determine what to teach and features need to varyto increase generalization. 1. Define the Instructional Universe 2. Define the Range of Relevant Stimulus and Response Variation 3. Select Examples for Teaching & Testing 4. Sequencing Teaching Examples 5. Teaching the Examples 6. Testing with Non-trained Probe Examples
Academic Skills Profile • http://functionalworksample.pbworks.com/w/file/49653031/Academic%20Skills%20profile.doc
Writing Goals • See Functional Work Sample Wiki • http://functionalworksample.pbworks.com/w/page/49912525/Writing%20IEP%20Goals%20%20Objectives
Writing Goals- Linking to the common core • http://functionalworksample.pbworks.com/w/page/49912525/Writing%20IEP%20Goals%20%20Objectives
Using Goalbook • https://goalbookapp.com/ • Use Goal Wizard for your student OR browse goals.
Universal Design For Learning Framework: 3 Principles (cast.org)
Evidence-Based Practices • National Professional Development Center (NPDC) on ASD • autismpdc.fpg.unc.edu/content/evidence-based-practice • National Standards Project (2009) • http://www.nationalautismcenter.org/
Autism Internet Modules • http://www.autisminternetmodules.org/