1 / 20

Autism

Autism. By: Denae Wiley and Heather Gamble. What is Autism? . APA definition: Clinically significant, persistent deficits in social communication and interactions, as manifest by all of the following: Marked deficits in nonverbal and verbal communication used for social interaction.

kiana
Download Presentation

Autism

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Autism By: Denae Wiley and Heather Gamble

  2. What is Autism? • APA definition: • Clinically significant, persistent deficits in social communication and interactions, as manifest by all of the following: • Marked deficits in nonverbal and verbal communication used for social interaction. • Lack of social reciprocity • Failure to develop and maintain peer relationships appropriate to developmental level. • Restricted, repetitive patterns of behavior, interests, and activities, as manifested by at least two of the following: • Stereotyped motor or verbal behaviors, or unusual sensory behaviors. • Excessive adherence to routines and ritualized patterns of behavior • Restricted, fixated interests. • Symptoms must be present in early childhood.

  3. Characteristics • Impaired Social Interaction • Deficits in social responsiveness • Babies/toddlers don’t respond normally to being picked up/cuddled. • Might not show differentiated response to parents, siblings, or teachers, compared to strangers. • Smile/laugh when something isn’t funny • Might not learn to play normally • Might not develop typical attachment to parents/ friends

  4. App’s to help… • Social Stories Creator • Students are able to create their own stories through the use of different scenarios which teach vital social skills. • This app is helpful to the teacher and the students.

  5. Characteristics • Impaired Communication • Communicative intent: desire to communicate for social purposes • Mute: use no, or almost no, language. • Speech sound robotic • Echolalia: echoing what they hear • Reverse pronouns • Lack eye contact

  6. App’s to help… • iCommunicate: • Uses flashcards for children with speech impairments. • Allows for communication through various pictures and sentences. • You can upload personalized photographs/audio for certain requests or verbal cues.

  7. Characteristics • Repetitive Patterns of Behavior • Stereotyped motor or verbal behaviors: repetitive, ritualistic motor behaviors. • Ex.) twirling, spinning objects, flapping hands, and rocking • Extreme fascination or preoccupation with objects and a very restricted range of interests. • Impaired Cognition • Difficulty in coding and categorization of information. • Rely on literal translations • Remember by location in space • Might have exception capabilities in playing music, drawing, or calculating

  8. App’s to help… • iPrompts-Visual Supports, Schedules and Picture Prompts for Autism and SPED • Contains a detailed schedule of the day including timers and alarms. • Contains a variety of choices.

  9. Characteristics • Abnormal Sensory Perceptions • Either hyper-responsive or hypo-responsive to particular stimuli in environment. • Hyper= overly • Hypo= under

  10. App’s to help… • The Calm Counter- Social Story and Anger Management Tool • Used as a visual and auditory tool to help calm students down when they are angry or anxious.

  11. Asperger Syndrome: • Asperger Syndrome is much like Autism. • Children with Asperger Syndrome have symptoms much like Autistic symptoms just less severe. • There is also an absence of language delay in Asperger Syndrome. • Interests may border on the obsessive. • Students with Asperger Syndrome want to fit in, but simply do not know how.

  12. Diagnosis • When? Typically from 6 months - 2 years. • Early signs: • 6 months: No big smiles or joyful expressions • 9 months: No back-and- forth sharing of sounds, smiles, other facial expressions. • 12 months: No consistent response to own name, no babbling, no back- and- forth gestures (pointing, showing, reaching, waving) • 16 months: No words • 24 months: No two-word meaningful phrases

  13. Where are they educated? • Public schools • Through special programs in the public schools • Ex.) TEACCH: employs an approach called Structured Teaching, which emphasizes a highly structured and predictable classroom environment and the use of visual learning. • Inclusion in the general education classroom • Self contained classrooms • Resource classrooms

  14. Educational Considerations • Due to the varied symptoms of Autism, it has been fertile ground for faddish and unproven treatment methods. • As one authority says, “The ASD field is particularly well known for its willingness to embrace and/or maintain a liberal tolerance toward unproven and controversial interventions and treatments. A number of these purportedly effective methods apparent to have neither empirical nor logical foundation. Simpson, 2004, p.139)

  15. How will we educate students with Autism academically? • Through the use of Direct Instruction: • Highly structured, direct approach; use basic principles of behavioral psychology. • Applied Behavior Analysis: highly structured approach focused on teaching functional skills and continuous assessment of progress. • Positive reinforcement/rewards for desired behavior • Instruct in the natural setting: • Behavioral psychology is more effective when taught in the natural settings and with natural interactions by which children normally learn language and other social skills. • What would this look like in your classroom?

  16. How do you manage behavior? • Many students with autism display highly inappropriate behaviors, such as biting, hitting, or screaming. • A combination of functional behavioral assessment and positive behavioral intervention and support may reduce or eliminate these behaviors. • Functional behavioral assessment (FBA): determining consequences, antecedents (trigger), and setting events that maintain such behaviors. • Positive behavioral intervention and support (PIBS): ways to support positive behavior rather than punishing negative behaviors.

  17. Earliest Sign of Autism • Did you know that you can detect Autism in infants as earlier as 2 months of age? • A New York Times article informs readers that a new study shows that infants who later developed Autism spent less time looking at people’s eyes as they grew older. • Now lets take a deeper look at the new study: http://www.nytimes.com/video/science/100000002543364/spotting-autism-in-an-infants-gaze.html

  18. Resources: • http://www.defyingthespectrum.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/04/AutismAwareness2013FACTS.jpg • http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmedhealth/PMH0002494/ • Hallahan, Daniel P, James M. Kauffman, and Paige C. Pullen. Exceptional Learners: An Introduction to Special Education. Boston, MA: Pearson/Allyn & Bacon, 2009. Print • http://educationnext.org/autismandtheinclusionmandate/ • http://www.nytimes.com/video/science/100000002543364/spotting-autism-in-an-infants-gaze.html • http://www.autism-society.org/about-autism/aspergers-syndrome/

More Related