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The Education of Students with Autism: lessons from research

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Behaviour alone is misleading in ASD. ... alongside - imitative- join in' - co-operate - collaborate. Process for social engagement ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Education of Students with Autism: lessons from research


1
The Education of Students with Autism lessons
from research
  • Professor Rita Jordan
  • Autism Centre for Education Research
  • University of Birmingham, UK

2
A Developmental Disorder
  • Behaviour alone is misleading in ASD.
  • Teachers need to be aware of the developmental
    differences, leading to
  • compensation
  • secondary 'handicaps'
  • a transactional process

3
Whats Special about ASD?
  • Need to learn explicitly what others acquire
    intuitively or through social tutoring
  • identity of self/ other
  • saliency of social signals
  • agency and intention
  • relevance and priority
  • social/cultural meaning
  • nature of communication
  • emotional consciousness

4
Move away from deficit model
  • SEN from
  • condition
  • strengths
  • interests
  • environment
  • Difference and transactional nature
  • work to strengths
  • match to style
  • respect for compensation
  • teach for meaning / relevance

5
Learning Style
  • Visual rather than verbal
  • Memory
  • cued
  • rote
  • Social a dimension of difficulty
  • Emotions and cognition
  • use interests for engagement
  • At sensory stage of meaning
  • presentation --gt reference
  • Repetition consolidation
  • Explicit strategies for problem solving

6
Autism Friendly Environments
  • Respect and dignity
  • Life-long education not conformity
  • Reduce stress to allow flexibility
  • Allow right to be different
  • Build on strengths compensate for weaknesses
  • Build protection against anxiety/ depression
  • Trained staff for inclusion

7
Child factors Sociability
  • Wings classification
  • withdrawn/ solitary -gt passive/ responds -gt
    active but odd -gt eccentric sensitive
  • Varies with conditions with teaching
  • Level suggests optimum form of approach
  • withdrawn - 11 directive desensitisation
  • passive - interest structured play experience
  • active but odd - social rules experience
    (context)
  • eccentric - social skills in context e.g. buddy

8
Teaching Play Making Friends
  • Essence of play is
  • spontaneity
  • emotional engagement
  • Need informed choice about friends
  • fear of loss of control
  • no experience
  • 2 strands to play teaching
  • cognitive
  • sensori-motor -gt relational -gt functional -gt
    symbolic
  • social
  • alongside -gt imitative-gt join in -gt co-operate
    - collaborate

9
Process for social engagement
  • No fixed assumptions
  • Enabling structures for participation (including
    repetition)
  • Supporting the supporters - paired schemes
  • Allowing risk -gt excitement
  • Supported peers better that trained ones

10
Teaching Social Interaction
  • Videos / instant photographs for social cues
  • Innovatory aspects of ICT
  • Range of techniques based on mutual enjoyment of
    interaction
  • Intensive Interaction
  • Option/Son Rise
  • Frameworks for communication
  • Music therapy
  • Sherborne movement
  • Hanen/ Child Talk/ PACT
  • DIR/ RDI/SCERTS
  • SMILE

11
Teaching Social Understanding
  • Cognitive aspects of early interaction
  • Social Stories
  • Comic Book Conversations
  • SULP
  • SEAL?
  • P4C
  • TEACCH explicit labels What did she say? What
    did she mean?
  • Video analysis

12
Teaching about emotions
  • Self then others
  • External cueing - teach to connect
  • Language / symbols assist generalisation
  • Give panic reactions
  • Teach cause effect for own anxiety
  • Stress reductions
  • Allow for uniprocessing

13
Communication and ASDs
  • Language and communication separate
  • Often associated language problems
  • Prognosis
  • All aspects
  • gesture
  • posture
  • facial expression
  • emotion
  • pragmatics

14
Communication teaching in ASD
  • Communication language
  • use of music and visual structure
  • COMFOR (Noens Berckalaer-Onnes, 2004), PECS
    TEACCH
  • comprehension of educational language
  • Inner language
  • language needs to be contextualised
  • associate with meaning / action

15
Educational Language
  • Model of conversation
  • contributions, topic maintenance
  • Assumption of joint attention
  • holding up, eye/finger pointing
  • Sarcasm metaphor
  • Literal understanding
  • jokes, idioms, pragmatic context,
  • Model of questions
  • display, probe

16
Tensions in Education for ASD
  • Entitlement vs. specialism
  • access or meeting SEN?
  • Optimum for learning vs. optimum for social
    integration
  • specialised or peer engagement
  • Readiness for inclusion vs. learning without
    experience
  • how to achieve readiness without experience?

17
Processes for Inclusion
  • Support
  • trained - ASDs
  • enabling - Observe/ Wait/ Listen
  • Staged
  • special -gt reverse -gtintegrated
  • Resource base
  • Free time
  • use of buddies / circles of friends

18
Curriculum Issues
  • Individual - no subject exclusions
  • Foreign language teaching a good model for social
    linguistic understanding
  • Use interests where feasible or work then play
  • Aspects of some subjects a problem - teach
    specifically or by-pass

19
Remember
  • ..calling it so does not make it so .
  • Inclusive settings may be socially isolating
  • Specialist settings may be narrow of poor
    quality

20
An ASD Curriculum?
  • No autism curriculum or single approach
  • Needs to fit
  • individual
  • family
  • practitioner
  • context
  • current goals
  • prognosis

21
24 hour Needs?
  • Need to teach
  • regularisation of daily living
  • functional contexts for social skills
    communication
  • leisure opportunities
  • Severe problems in sleeping/ feeding/ toileting/
    behaviour management
  • Need for structure not always compatible with
    family life
  • Home not able to cooperate in needed consistency
    in environment
  • Leisure life opportunities restricted through
    geography, behaviour or lack of support

22
Single vs Eclectic Curricula
  • Single
  • Enables staff expertise
  • Better monitoring easier evaluation
  • Builds staff parent confidence
  • Enables positive views
  • Eclectic
  • Can match to goal
  • All needs can be addressed
  • Needs compatibility checks child perspective
  • Take strengths from each

23
Evidence
  • No single approach
  • Evidence for
  • structure
  • behavioural methods
  • training parents in social interaction
    communication techniques
  • In all studies some do well and some do not
  • In all studies children tend to learn only what
    are explicitly taught

24
Judging Research
  • Does it relate to children with this childs
    characteristics?
  • Is implementation the same as the original study?
  • Does research presented represent a fair sample
    is reference made to systematic review findings?
  • Where there is a comparison group are comparisons
    fair?
  • are the goals the same?
  • do assessments favour one group?
  • What are time-lines criteria for assessment
    return to mainstream?

25
Building on specific approaches
  • Choose on basis of principles - not chance
  • Understand the principles of each approach
    adopted
  • Individualise
  • Take perspective of child and examine interaction
    - i.e. the effect of the whole
  • Use professional judgment
  • Treat each situation as a single study to assess

26
Teaching for Purpose
  • Different approach needed to suit
  • Individual characteristics
  • sociability
  • language
  • cognitive level
  • sensory issues
  • age
  • Goal
  • Practitioner comfort/ ability/ knowledge

27
Conclusion
  • Treating people equally does not mean
  • treating people in the same way
  • but treating them differently
  • to provide equal access
  • To do otherwise is to discriminate
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