Title: Bryna Siegel, Ph.D. Director, Autism Clinic
1- Bryna Siegel, Ph.D.Director, Autism Clinic
- Bryna.siegel_at_ucsf.edu
- Professor, Child Adolescent PsychiatryChildren
s Center at Langley Porter - University of California, San Francisco
2Give a man a fish and hell eat for a day
- Give a man a fishing pole and he will eat for a
life time
3WHAT IS JUMPSTART? A NEW KIND OF EARLY
INTERVENTION
- FOR THE CHILD
- A Learning-to-Learn Program
- FOR THE PARENT
- A Parent-Centered Program
- Didactics
- Skills for Special Parenting (Special Education)
- Being an Informed Consumer and Advocate
4Syndromes Autism and the Common Cold
- The Autistic Spectrum
- Social Isolation
- Low Interest in Peers
- Echolalic Speech
- Non-conversational
- Perseveration
- Poor Toy Play
- Odd Motor Movements
- The Common Cold
- Runny Nose
- Stuffed Sinuses
- Hacking Cough
- Sneezing
- Sore Throat
- Feverish
- Headache
5What Does This Mean For Epidemiology? (When is a
sneeze a cold?)The Latest from the CDC
- 2007
- 6.71,000 1160
- 1 Language concerns, 2 Social
- Earlier Studies
- 1101 to 1222 (2000)
- 1303 to 194 (2002)
- 51-88 w/ signs
- 50 _at_ 4½-5½ years old
6Lets Just Treat Whats Wrong
- Importance (or Not) of Diagnosis
- Identifying Learning Processes
- Identification of What Needs to be Learned
- Figuring Out How to Teach so the Child becomes an
Independent Learner
7How Social Deficits Affect Learning
- Lack of socio-emotional reciprocity
- Lack of desire to please others
- Low response to social reinforcers
- Lacks concern re effect on others
- Lack of awareness of others
- Motive to please self is foremost
- Instrumental learning style
- Lack of social imitation
- Low incidental learning via copying others
- No drive to follow group norms
8How Non-Verbal Communication Deficits Affect
Learning
- Low response to facial cues
- May not understand smiles of encouragement
- May not understand warnings of displeasure
- Ignores pointing, hand signals, head shakes that
clarify words, control behavior - Poor reception of non-verbal cues seen as
non-compliance/ defiance - Poor reception of non-verbal cues taken as
inability to comprehend words/ voice tone
9How Verbal CommunicationDeficits Affect Learning
- Limitations in receptive language
- Signalnoise problem in incoming verbal
signal - -noisy social-linguistic field
- -limitations to pure memory buffer
- Language processing with poor parsing
- Limitations in expressive language
- Oral-motor apraxia has negative synergy w/ low
expressive drive - Without theory of mind, no drive to share
ideas
10How Play and Exploration Deficits Affect Learning
- Lack of imagination in play
- No re-enactment of experience via play to link
action and language - No symbols to link to language to abstract
thinking - Stereotyped and repetitive interests
- Averse to novelty/ low curiosity
- Limited learning through exploration
- Repetitive interests mental down time
11Theoretical Underpinnings for JumpStart- I
- The Autistic Spectrum is a Collection of
Autistic Learning Disabilities and Autistic
Learning Styles Essentially Described by the
Various DSM Diagnostic Criteria - Each Criterion Met Specifies a Needed Area of
Remediation and/or Delineates An Available or
Non-Available Modality for Perceiving,
Processing, Output of Stimuli
12Theoretical Underpinnings for JumpStart- IIThe
Developmental Perspective
- Evolution has worked out the most efficient
sequence for skill acquisition (and supporting
neural architecture). - Developmental psychology maps that sequence.
- Children learn at different rates and in
different ways, but the sequence of
skills-building needs to be developmentally-ordere
d to provide a solid foundation.
13Introducing JumpStart
- Intensive, one-week, parent training
- Center-based, two paired families per session
- Development of childs learning readiness skills
so parents can wrap-around at home - Focus on helping families learning skills to
parent a child with autism - Teaching parents to be discriminating consumers
and general contractors
14JumpStart Goals for the Child
- Provide initial intervention for ASD children
(mostly under 36 months) - Develop learning readiness so the child can
benefit from a wider range of educational and
therapeutic resources - Extended diagnostic period to develop on-going
treatment plans based on individual learning
strengths and weaknesses, and motivational profile
15JumpStart Goals for the Family
- Train parents to use a fishing pole, not just
eat fish - Introduce parents to modes of treatment
- Promote communication about autism (mother ?
father, parents ?siblings) - Encourage familys non-autism well-being
- Facilitate entry into appropriate on-going
services
16JumpStart Goals of Training
- Teach parents to think like a teacher
- Teach parents to make home an autism-specific
learning environment - Train treators how this child learns for
transition to on-going service, e.g., - Program specialists, School psychologists,
- Special day class, RSP inclusion teachers
- ABA tutors and other para-professionals.
17JumpStart Longer Term Goals
- Empirically test a model for earliest
intervention centered on parent-training - Become a community center for education and
treatment of children with autism - Reduce the distress associated with parenting a
child with autism - Create more informed consumers of autism services
18JumpStart Program Activities
19JumpStart Daily Parent Teaching
- All Days Direct parent didactics on autism
- Days 1-4 Observation through video 1-way
mirror - Watch Master Teacher, Review, Analyze Copy
Master Teacher Self-Critique - Days 3-4 Cross-teach another child
- Day 5 Docenting Observe future treators
20JumpStart Psycho-social Parent Intervention
Methods
- Group sessions for parents/ Topics
- Grief responses to the diagnosis
- Impact on the marriage and family
- Impact on individual life goals
- Parent pairings for social support
21The Child-Focused ProgramThree Tracks
- Cognitive Learning Readiness
- Motivation, Cause Effect, Pivotal Response
- Communication Foundations
- VIA (Visual Interaction Augmentation)
- Learning Through Child-Led Play
- Increasing Reciprocity and Expanding Repertoire
22I Developmental-Behavioral Approach
- Compliance and Attention
- Developing an Instructional Contract
- Expanding Reinforcers 1o Social
- Motivation
- Developing A Reward Hierarchy
- Moving Toward Naturalistic/ Contextual
Reinforcers (a la PRT)
23Teaching That Is Developmental and Behavioral
- Based on where the child is developmentally (e.g.
18 month receptive language)teach the next set
of skills. - Do teach using validated behavioral principles.
(Dont teach from a cookbook dog-training
manual). - Teach the child according to needs and interest
to establish parent as source of learningjust
like any child.
24II Communication Foundations
- VIA Is About
- Communication Based on a Developmental
Psycholinguistics Model of Habilitation - Teaching Paralinguistics
- Teaching with Augmentative Visuals
- VIAs Goal
- Increasing Drive to Communicate
- Increasing Spontaneity/ Initiative
25III Learning Through Child-Led Play
- Increasing Reciprocity
- A la DIR, Expanding Circles/ RDI
- Expanding Repertoire
- Increase Curiosity/ Increase Exploration
- Decrease Behaviors Incompatible with Learning
- Scaffolding Sensory Threshold Problems
- Decrease Repetitiveness/ Rigidity
26The Parent-Centered ProgramThree Tracks
27I Didactics Learning About Autism and Autism
Treatments
- What Autism Is
- What We Know Now/ What We Might Learn/ Crystal
Ball Readings - Teaching How Children with Autism Learn
- The ALD/ALS Model
- Teaching What the Treatment Models Are
- Pre Fixe vs Al a Carte Dining
- Vaccinating Parents Against False Hope
28II Wrap Around Special Parenting The
Flip-Side of Special Education
- Learning Which Strategies Are Effective
- Observing Learning/ Reading the Child
- What the Child Apprehends/ Misapprehends
- How to Implement The Home Edition of Txs
- Developmental-Behavioral Teaching
- Learning to Communicate
- Mining the Value of Play
29III Dealing Proactively w/ Professionals
- Being An Active Participant in
- Private speech and language therapy
- Occupational therapy
- Play Based Therapy
- Its Not How Many Hours? Content Over Form
- Advocacy with Systems of Care
- The Regional Center
- The Schools
- Doctors and Other Professionals
30Four Special Emphases in JumpStart
- Establishing the Instructional Contract
- Areas of Child Instruction
- Pivotal Responding the Self-Initiating Learner
- Steps to Self-Initiated Learning
- Developmentally-Based Pre-Linguistic
Communication Training - VIA (Visual Interaction Augmentation)
- Applying the ALD/ALS (Autistic Learning
Disability/ Autistic Learn Styles) Model
311 JumpStart Cause and Effect
- Assessing the Instructional Contract
- Teach Do Something to Get Something
- Provide High Predictability
- Limit-setting
- Motor-prompting
- Repetition
- Visuals/ Visual Scheduling
322-JumpStart Motivation
- First Assess Reinforcer Hierarchy
- Foods/ Sensory Rewards/ Activities
- Second DTT with external reinforcers
- Third PRT w/ intrinsic reinforcers
- Fourth Titrate Reinforcement Schedule by Task
Difficulty - Fifth Dont Let Data Get in the Way
33Principles of Pivotal Response Training
Incidental Teaching (Natural opportunities)
Mand- Model (Request- prompt)
Time- Delay (Wait for child)
Milieu Teaching (Combines all 3)
343-JumpStart Self-initiated Learning
- First Non-verbal imitation training
- Second Opportunities to model high value events
(incidental learning) - Third Play turn-taking with high value
activities - Fourth Play elaboration based on intrinsic
reward value of initial activity
354-JumpStart/ VIAThree Key Communicative
Competencies
- Addressing Para-linguistic Deficits
- Pair non-verbal communication with visuals
- Pair vocal tone with visual cuing
- Addressing Theory of Mind and Central Coherence
Deficits - Teach to what the child has in mind
- Start teach w/ many specifics, not general
- Teaching Language Developmentally
36VIA Mechanics
- Photographic (or 3-D) icons only
- Photos of exactly what the child has in mind
- Icons with words labels to promote auditory
recognition - Icons located when and where the child has the
object or action in mind - Orally Speak motherese
- Gesturally Motherese para-linguistics
37VIAContrast with Teaching Verbal Behavior
- Teach semantics in developmental sequence
(horizontally, not vertically) - Teach multiple SDs, not multiple words in a set
- Why? To develop central coherence/ linguistic
prototypes - Teach concepts across natural contexts so
generalization is not an extra step
38JumpStart/ VIARationale
- Developmentally-based acquisition of language
concepts - Emphasizes teaching integrated para-linguistics
as foundational to linguistics - Developmentally focused on increasing spontaneity
over MLU or speech clarity - Focused on increasing inter-subjectivity by
sharing of desired object of communication
39JumpStart Research Component-IOverall
Treatment Model Efficacy
- Pre-test children at time of diagnosis
- Symptoms/ severity (DSM, ADI-R, ADOS)
- Language and Cognition (PLS, M-P, WPPSI)
- Social and language pragmatics (CSBS)
- Post-test after Jump Start
- Post-test after 6m 12m compared to
treatment-as-usual (EIBI or SDC)
40JumpStart Research Component-IIVIA vs PECS
- Efficacy of a behavioral model for visually-based
augmentative communication v a visual-developmenta
lly based model - Manual development
- Small RCT of VIA v PECS
- H VIA
- Language pragmatics
- Spontaneous requesting
41JumpStart Research Component-IIIDevelopmental
DT v DT as Usual
- Teach linguistic prototypes, not verbal SDs
- Periodic data, not trial-by-trial data
- Build in more child choice
- Dynamically inter-leaf adult-led and
child-initiated trials by consistently
reinforcing lead-taking by child
42References
- Siegel, B (2003). Helping Children with Autism
Learn Treatment Approaches for Parents and
Professionals, New York Oxford University
Press. - Siegel, B (1996). The World of the Autistic
Child Understanding and Treating Autistic
Spectrum Disorders, New York Oxford University
Press.