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Bryna Siegel, Ph.D. Director, Autism Clinic Bryna.siegel@ucsf

Bryna Siegel, Ph.D. Director, Autism Clinic Bryna.siegel@ucsf.edu Professor, Child & Adolescent Psychiatry Children’s Center at Langley Porter University of California, San Francisco. “Give a man a fish and he’ll eat for a day;”. “Give a man a fishing pole and he will eat for a life time…”.

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Bryna Siegel, Ph.D. Director, Autism Clinic Bryna.siegel@ucsf

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  1. Bryna Siegel, Ph.D.Director, Autism Clinic Bryna.siegel@ucsf.edu Professor, Child & Adolescent PsychiatryChildren’s Center at Langley Porter University of California, San Francisco

  2. “Give a man a fish and he’ll eat for a day;” “Give a man a fishing pole and he will eat for a life time…”

  3. WHAT 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

  4. The Common Cold Runny Nose Stuffed Sinuses Hacking Cough Sneezing Sore Throat Feverish Headache The Autistic Spectrum Social Isolation Low Interest in Peers Echolalic Speech Non-conversational Perseveration Poor Toy Play Odd Motor Movements Syndromes: Autism and the Common Cold

  5. What Does This Mean For Epidemiology?(When is a sneeze a cold?)The Latest from the CDC 2007 • 6.7:1,000= 1:160 • # 1: Language concerns, #2: Social Earlier Studies • 1:101 to 1:222 (2000) • 1:303 to 1:94 (2002) • 51%-88% w/ signs < 3 years old • ~50% @ 4½-5½ years old

  6. Let’s Just Treat What’s 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

  7. How 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

  8. How 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

  9. How Verbal CommunicationDeficits Affect Learning Limitations in receptive language Signal:noise 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

  10. How 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’

  11. Theoretical Underpinnings forJumpStart- 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

  12. Theoretical Underpinnings forJumpStart- 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-ordered to provide a solid foundation.

  13. Introducing JumpStart • Intensive, one-week, parent training • Center-based, two paired families per session • Development of child’s 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’

  14. JumpStart: 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

  15. JumpStart: 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 family’s ‘non-autism’ well-being • Facilitate entry into appropriate on-going services

  16. JumpStart: 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.

  17. JumpStart: 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

  18. JumpStart Program Activities

  19. JumpStart: 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

  20. JumpStart: Psycho-socialParent 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

  21. The Child-Focused Program:Three 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

  22. I: 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)

  23. Teaching 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. (Don’t teach from a ‘cookbook’ dog-training manual). • Teach the child according to needs and interest to establish parent as source of learning—just like any child.

  24. II: Communication Foundations VIA Is About: • Communication Based on a Developmental Psycholinguistics Model of Habilitation • Teaching Paralinguistics • Teaching with Augmentative Visuals VIA’s Goal: Increasing Drive to Communicate Increasing Spontaneity/ Initiative

  25. III: 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

  26. The Parent-Centered Program:Three Tracks

  27. I: 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 CarteDining • ‘Vaccinating’ Parents Against False Hope

  28. II: 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

  29. III: Dealing Proactively w/ Professionals • Being An Active Participant in: Private speech and language therapy Occupational therapy Play Based Therapy • It’s Not “How Many Hours?”: Content Over Form • Advocacy with Systems of Care The Regional Center The Schools Doctors and Other Professionals

  30. Four 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

  31. 1: 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

  32. 2-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: Don’t Let Data Get in the Way

  33. Principles of Pivotal Response Training Incidental Teaching (Natural opportunities) Mand- Model (Request- prompt) Time- Delay (Wait for child) Milieu Teaching (Combines all 3)

  34. 3-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

  35. 4-JumpStart/ VIA:Three Key Communicative Competencies • Addressing Para-linguistic Deficits: Pair non-verbal communication with visuals Pair vocal tone with visual cuing • Addressing Theory of Mind and CentralCoherence Deficits Teach to what the child has ‘in mind’ Start teach w/ many specifics, not general • Teaching Language Developmentally

  36. VIA 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

  37. VIA:Contrast 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

  38. JumpStart/ VIA:Rationale • 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

  39. JumpStart: 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)

  40. JumpStart: Research Component-IIVIA vs PECS • Efficacy of a behavioral model for visually-based augmentative communication v a visual-developmentally based model • Manual development • Small RCT of VIA v PECS • H: VIA= Language pragmatics Spontaneous requesting

  41. JumpStart: Research Component-III‘Developmental’ 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

  42. References: • 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.

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