Title: Autism
1Autism
- Eric Reiss
- Annotated Bibliography
- GED 641B
- Professor Doyle
- 10/29/03
2Turnbull, Turnbull, Shank, Smith Exceptional
Lives. Autism Ch. 10 pp 282-287
- Referred to as Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD)
- Includes five disorders
- Autistic Disorder
- Retts Disorder
- Childhood Disintegrative Disorder
- Aspergers Disorder
- Pervasive Development Disorder Not Otherwise
Specified
- Symptoms
- Poor Language Skills
- Repetitive Behavior
- Self-Injurious Behavior
- Atypical Social Development
- Sensory and Movement Disorders
3AUTISM DefinedIDEA (34 C.F.R., Part 300,
300.7b 1)
- Autism is a developmental disability that
significantly affects a students verbal and
nonverbal communication, social interactions, and
education performance. It is generally evident
before age 3. - Characteristics include engagement in repetitive
activities stereotyped movements, resistance to
environmental change or changes in daily
routines, unusual responses to sensory
experiences.
4AUTISM DefinedVermont
- Autism means a developmental disability
significantly affecting verbal and non verbal
communication and social interactions, generally
evident before the age of 3. - Other characteristics often associated with
autism are engagement in repetitive activities
stereotyped movements, resistance to
environmental change or changes in daily
routines, unusual responses to sensory
experiences. - The term does not apply if a childs educational
performance is adversely affected primarily
because the child has an emotional disturbance as
defined in Rule 2362.1(h). - THE EPT shall obtain an opinion of a licensed
physician as to the existence of autism and its
effect on the students ability to function. -
5Jeremy Jones
- Higher Functioning young man with Autistism
- Lives in Inner City of Kansas City
- Loves Reading Maps
- Obsessive about materials, rules of behavior,
clothes, and toiletries - Rocks powerfully in furniture to test breaking
point - Fixates on oscillating fans
- Surfs TV in search of weather reports
- Aloof from peers at school
- Exhibits mild aggression
- Needs familiar environment and routine
6No author, Ascribe Higher Education News Service.
San Diego State University Researcher Paints
Clearer Picture of Autism Development October
22, 2003 pp. N/A
- Research conducted by Ralph Axel-Mueller finds
- Early-developing functions, such as moving
fingers, uses up more brain resources in autistic
children and crowds out later developing skills
such as language. - Autism is likely based on elementary
abnormalities that occur early in childs
development - Patients with autism exhibit a scattering of
brain functions. i.e. brain activity occurs in
areas not normally involved in simple tasks. - During development, simple tasks require more
brain tissue - As a result, these parts of brain are not
available for developing more complex functions.
7Hollander, Eric Phillips, Ann T. Yeh,
Chin-Chin. The Lancet Targeted treatments for
symptom domains in child and adolescent autism
August 30, 2003 v362 i9385 p732
- Pharmacological Treatments for Autism
- No Drugs are developed exclusively for autism
- Drug treatment consists of prescribing drugs
borrowed from the treatment of other disorders
with overlapping symptoms - Certain drugs are useful in reduction of
repetitive behaviors and mood disorders
(serotonin-reuptake inhibitors) - A combination of drug and behavioral intervention
can be complementary and effective - Where symptoms exist only in certain
environments, behavioral intervention is more
appropriate - With a history of unsuccessful behavioral
intervention, drug intervention may be
appropriate - For children, only severe cases, like severe
aggression, should enter into drug trials.
8Behavioral Treatments
- T.E.A.C.C.H. Model
- Treatment and Education of Autistic and related
Communication Handicapped Children - When used in residential treatment of adults,
found a decrease in difficult behaviors over time - However, there was no difference in the
acquisition of skills - More on this model in the instructional practices
section of the bibliography
9Curran, Laura Kresch Newschaffer, Craig J.
Public Health Reports Autism an emerging health
problem. September-October 2003 v118 i5 p
393-397
- Increasing Incidence of Autism?
- Science still baffled over its etiology (genetic
origin) - Diagnosis has been purely behaviorally bases
- New criteria for diagnosis may account for the
apparent increase in its prevalence - Currently estimated at 5-10 per 10,000
- Prevalence in males is 3-4 times higher than
females (unknown as to why) - 1990, autism became a federally recognized
category for special education classification - Since 1990, a 25 increase in number of children
classified as autistic - People with autism need support to navigate
routine educational and social situations
10Can Autism Be Prevented?
- Since there is no known genetic origin, thus far
no prevention methods have been developed - Since 1994, under IDEA, funding for screening and
early intervention in toddlers has been available
in all states
11Websites
- www.autism-resources.com
- Links to other autism related websites (treatment
options, personal experiences, autism
organizations) - FAQs (glossary of terms, definitions, related
disorders, history, organizations, movements) - Advice for parents with autistic children,
includes an online mailing list (listserv) - Book information for professionals, parents and
children. Includes fiction and non-fiction
selections
12www.autism-society.org
- Autism Society of America (ASA)
- What is autism and other general information
- Sections on research, resources, events, news,
and advocacy - Includes a brief history of ASA and links to
other sites - Resources include local ASA chapters, how to
join or donate, parent training, vocational
rehabilitation, list of special education
departments, Insurance information - A complete advocacy agenda with a written focus
for 2003
13www.autism.com
- Center for the Study of Autism
- Categorized links to autism related websites
- General
- Oregon Websites
- Related Disorders
- Nutrition
- Education/Intervention
- Research
- Web Cameras
14www.nimh.nih.gov/publicat/autism.cfm
- National Institute of Mental Health
- Understanding autism (what it is, how it is
caused, diagnosis, accompanying disorders,
symptoms, brain functions) - Treatment/Intervention (lists of different
treatment methods with brief descriptions of
each, education options, medication options.
15Instructional Strategies
- T.E.A.C.C.H.
- Highly structured visual teaching
- Visible daily schedules, individual work systems
- Predictable environment
- Repetitive tasks
- Reduce confusion and anxiety
- Finish task before beginning new one
16Schedule
- Focus on what you want child to do
- Use schedules, calendars, and lists to help
sequence events - Use visual cues (objects, photos, icons, check
lists) - Individualize instruction to meet childs
developmental level and skill level - Length of schedule based on developmental level
and skill level - Visual Work System- what work? How much work? How
does student know when work is finished? What
comes next?
17Work Task Examples
- Consider location, distractions, boundaries,
buzzing lights, motors, hallway sounds, visual
distractions and smells - Visually clear what activities happen in which
areas - Furniture and materials clearly organized
- Locate student near teacher, facing teacher
- In large groups, place student between two
model students - Use visual barriers to limit distractions
18Communication Suggestions
- Behavior is communication! Dont take it
personally! - Write behavior rules (list of what to do and what
not to do) - Role play appropriate behavior in social
situations - Use positive rewards
- Use if/then pattern to aid in understanding
- Teach student to be flexible i.e. a method to let
student know there will be a change in the daily
schedule or routine such as - Let student know ahead of time when an activity
will begin or end - Let student know ahead of time if you are going
to touch or move the student - Dont assume the student automatically
understands you - Watch for likes, dislikes, and interests.
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