Title: Pathways to Independence: Maximizing Options
1Pathways to Independence Maximizing Options
- Jane N. Erin
- The University of Arizona
2The common goalA better quality of life in
adulthood
- For a visually impaired individual, quality of
life depends on skills that may not be taught in
the regular classroom. - Expanded core skills enhance
- Independence
- Initiative
- Options
- Opportunities
3Are we ensuring options for all students?
4Most people would agree on a high quality of
adult life for Sydney
- A college degree that leads to a satisfying
career - Choices about relationship, marriage and family
- Several important leisure activities
- Friends and acquaintances
- The skill to make personal decisions and to meet
personal needs
5Dominick communicates through iconic signs and
gestures
- Abilities
- lifting and physical activities
- opening doors for others
- smiles, laughs, and enjoys favorite people
6What do you think a high quality of life for
Dominick will be?
- He will be allowed to develop friendships. He
will be able to participate in favorite
activities as a reward. He will have work, be
paid for it, and be able to spend his own money. - Diane Raab, Teacher
7Most of the work in assessment of Q o L is from
medical literature
- Quality of Life Profile for Adults
- (University of Toronto, www.utoronto.ca/qol/profil
e/adultVersion.html) - BEING Physical, Psychological, Spiritual
- BELONGING Living space People Access to
resources - BECOMING Daily activities, Leisure, Growth
-
-
8 1. Daily living skills
- In setting instructional priorities, consider
- Family and student preferences
- Activities that peers are doing
- Activities that will allow greater current
acceptance and independence - Activities that will allow acceptance and
independence in future settings
9If the child is not doing an age-appropriate task
efficiently, is the difficulty
- Physical strength or coordination? Then work on
physical capacity in related skills. - Exposure and experience? Then arrange for child
to observe others doing the task. - Lack of awareness of visual information? Then
describe visual aspects and problem solve
options. - Lack of motivation ? Then build in external or
internal reinforcers. - Inefficiency in time? Then work on speed building
and adapting key steps of task.
10In a study of DLS by Lewis and Iselin (2002),
students with VI were significantly different
than sighted peers
- Based on parent report,
- notable differences were
- use of hair dryer, alarm clock
- washing hair
- applying toothpaste
- tying shoes
- spreading with a knife
- preparing sandwiches
- wash and dry dishes
- empty wastebasket
11Traditionally, assessment is through task
analysis / discrepancy analysis
- Assess and teach in natural
- settings with real materials
- at appropriate times.
- A. Identify the steps in a typical task
- B. Compare how your student completes the
activity - C. Make needed adaptations
- D. Teach steps at which the student is not
proficient
12 But this method does not teach students PROBLEM
ANALYSIS
- Students also need to learn
- to identify decision points in the task
- to compensate for visual elements
- to organize space and materials
- to choose time and cost-effective options
13To take initiative in learning new skills,
students can
- Observe others doing them
- (Career skills)
- Interview other visually impaired people about
how they do the task (Social skills) - Locate and consult resources (Academic skills)
14Tips for teaching DLS
- 1. Do the task yourself with a
- simulated visual impairment
- 2. Ask blind/VI adults how they do it
- 3. Make sure student has observed the entire task
being done by someone else - 4. Generalize teaching to different settings
- 5. Encourage students to think about more than
one option and when each is appropriate (e.g.,
Say When vs. finger in a glass) -
15The problem of time
-
- Demands on student and teacher time make
it difficult to make time for extensive
instruction and practice. Instruction may
be - INTEGRATED Teaching math and reading in a
cooking lesson - SHORT LESSON 10 minutes during each direct
session - AT HOME After school during natural times
- WEEKEND OR SUMMER GROUPS With visually impaired
and/or nondisabled peers - PARENT and PEER INSTRUCTION Provide guidance to
families and friends on techniques
16Daily living skills
- 1. Product evaluation
- Do the cookies taste good?
- Is the laundry clean?
- 2. Task analysis data (Chart or graph)
- How much prompting is needed?
- What steps are done correctly?
- 3. Journal, schedule, or calendar
- Is the task completed consistently?
- Is the task completed in an appropriate time
span? -
-
17 2. Interacting with others
- The two subjects I use every day of my life are
social skills and orientation and mobility. These
were the two areas in which I received the least
instruction. - - Kevin Carrey
-
18 Why is social skills learning different for VI
students?
- They need skills that are
- Standard, like not interrupting others
- Invisible, like getting in line
- Disability specific, like storing a braillewriter
19Informal assessment of social skills
- Time diaries Students maintain record of regular
social activities - Quality of involvement measure (Sacks and
Wolffe) Four-point measurement scale for rating
involvement - Observation checklist Initiations,
- topic maintenance, length of interaction,
appropriateness of topic - Videotaping or audiotaping social interactions
(with participant permission) - Problem solving scenarios
20Social Skills Intervention Research
- Sacks, S., Gaylord-Ross, R. (1992). Peer
mediated and teacher-directed social skills
training for blind and visually impaired
students. - Three study groups of 5 students each
- Sighted peers trained to teach gaze, posture,
social initiation, and joining groups - Teacher-directed intervention
- No instruction (control)
21Which group learned best?
- Teacher trained?
- These students learned most right after training
but did not maintain skills. - Peer trained?
- These students learned more slowly but retained
and generalized skills. - Control?
- No changes except a small increase in joining
groups.
22 Peer instruction and monitoring
- Foster reciprocal partnerships (Vi student also
assists peer) - Clarify expected behavior with both students
- Identify monitoring cues
- Involve both students in monitoring progress
23Mentoring and Modeling
- Monitoring social skills that cannot be observed
- Understanding what next levels of skill are
expressed by peers, people of different ages,
genders - Mentors with similar visual impairment
- Looking up to another with disability
- Having a confidant
- Learning from a mentor social skills
24Students with multiple disabilities
- Consider use of external reinforcers if social
contact is not reinforcing - Teach scripted routines
- Teach standard gesture (wave, hand shake, touch
on hand or forearm) - Teach distinction between
- Public and private
- Formal and informal
Interacting with others in Post-Secondary Settings
25Living with others in Post-Secondary Settings
- Making choices about where and with whom to live
- Balancing the needs of all residents
- Describing and referring to visual impairment
- Requesting and declining assistance
263. Recreation and leisureIt is only recreation
if a person chooses to do it!
27Recreation and leisure
- Recreation and leisure are an ECC area because
- Students with VI may spend more time alone
(Wolffe Sacks, 1997) - Skills and activities are not learned by visual
observation in and out of school - Instruction is needed for inclusion
- Recreation and leisure affects adjustment and
social skills
28Recreation and leisure
- Research findings suggests variations compared to
sighted students in - Physical conditioning Lieberman founds that
fewer than 20 of the children passed at least
four items on the Fitnessgram (compared to
48-70) - Students with visual impairments participated
in fewer physical activities in leisure time and
slept more than sighted peers (Wolffe Sacks)
29Assessment of Recreation and Leisure
- Social aspects
- Individual
- With one person
- With small group
- With large group
- With a team
- Combined options
30Recreation and leisure
- Awareness and initiative
- Does s/he know what options exist?
- Is the student willing to try new activities?
- Does s/he take initiative in describing his or
her adaptive needs?
31Recreation is not just sports
- Hadley School for the Blind (correspondence)
- A birdsong tutor
- Accessing local sports and recreation programs
- Chess for beginners
- Chess Principles and strategies
- Container gardening
- On the move in the great outdoors
32Recreation and leisure
- Integrated instruction Links between academics
and recreational activities - MATH with card games, board games, cribbage
- ENGLISH with writing, poetry, book clubs
- ARTS Singing, sculpting, playing an instrument,
drama - SOCIAL STUDIES with travel to museums, movies,
collections - SCIENCE with hiking collecting
- (shells, rocks) cooking
33 Recreation and leisure How can progress be
measured?
- Outcomes may include
- Achievement Speed, score
- Motivation Frequency of participation request
reference in conversation - Improvement Percentage increase of score or
goal skill change on videotape - Products (sculpture, stories)
- Portfolio Compiled products of activity (Poems,
paintings, photographs)
344. Travel and mobility
- Independence involves
- The ability to plan complex experiences that
involve travel - The ability to direct others in providing
appropriate assistance - Physical stamina
- The skills to reorient when confused
35Transportation (Corn Sacks, 1994)
- Level of frustration experienced by
- Preplanning BL 2.66 LV 3.34
- Relying on others BL 3.16 LV 3.97
- Accepting rides BL 1.50 LV 2.33
- Carrying objects BL 2.66 LV 3.55
- Explaining to others BL 1.50 LV 3.07
36Managing transportationAs students approach
driving age, they must acquire skills to manage
non-driving
- Access to transportation
- Using public transportation
- Using private transportation (e.g., taxis)
- Hiring drivers
- Charity rides
- Exchange rides
- Automobile knowledge and care
37A matrix for decisions about rides A trip to the
mall (3 is best)
38Community Mobility
- Access to Transportation
- (Finding Wheels A Curriculum for Gaining
Transportation (Corn Rosenblum, 2000. Pro-Ed,
Inc.)
39How can a person with severe multiple
disabilities make mobility decisions?
- Direct others about how to move wheelchair
- Make a choice of what direction to go
- Receive a signal to be moved and return a signal
if able - Make choices of activities, using object symbols
- Choose speed, when to stop and start
40Factor that contribute to a successful work
experience (Golub, 2003)
- Independence in traveling and performing the job
- Individual achievement (beyond the team)
- Good social skills, including conversation
41For people with multiple disabilities, other
factors contribute to the quality of life
- Mutually satisfying interaction with others .
- Opportunities for personal choices
- There is variety in daily activities, with
community activities - Some privacy in living situation
- Participation in productive daily routines,
occupational if possible
42Integrating skills in community-based activities
- Education should include real life activities
that involve - Independent travel planning
- Interaction with others to request information
and purchase services - Use of money
- Choices based on preferences
- (Video example)