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Evidence-Based Practices for Supporting Students with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Evidence-Based Practices for Supporting Students with Autism Spectrum Disorder. Kathy Gould, Program Manager Illinois Autism Partnership at Easter Seals Metropolitan Chicago kgould@eastersealschicago.org Briana Weiner Illinois Statewide Technical Assistance Collaborative

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Evidence-Based Practices for Supporting Students with Autism Spectrum Disorder

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  1. Evidence-Based Practices for Supporting Students with Autism Spectrum Disorder Kathy Gould, Program Manager Illinois Autism Partnership at Easter Seals Metropolitan Chicago kgould@eastersealschicago.org Briana Weiner Illinois Statewide Technical Assistance Collaborative briana.weiner@istac.net

  2. DSM IV vs DSM 5 SUMMARY • No separate categories / levels of severity • Communication and social deficits are merged • Restrictive interests/repetitive behaviors include sensory • Decrease emphasis on actual language delay • Increaseemphasis on social behavior • Later onset of symptoms with increased social demands

  3. Major Changes DSM IV DSM 5 • Social Communication • Restricted Interests/Repetitive Behaviors/Sensory • Social Interaction • Communication • Repetitive/ Restrictive Behaviors

  4. National Prevalence • Between 2000 to 2008, autism prevalence has grown from1 in 150children to 1 in 68* from the year 2000 until 2010. (Centers for Disease Control Report, 2014). • Between1998 to 2010, the number of 6 to 21 year old children receiving services for an ASD in public special education programs increased from 54,064to370,011. • In 2010, 370,011children 6 through 21 years of age and 49,251children 3 through 5 years of age were served under the "autism" classification for special education services.

  5. PBIS Outcomes for Students with Disabilities

  6. PBIS Outcomes for Students with Disabilities The impact of PBIS implementation on elementary school students with disabilities is being found to be even greater than on those students without disabilities!

  7. Why Evidence-Based Practices? • Promotes positive outcomes for individuals with ASD • IDEIA (2004) requires that educational strategies be used that are based on “scientifically based research” • Accountability for schools and teachers for instructional practices employed • Data driven decision making for instructional practice choices

  8. National Standards ProjectNational Autism Center • Published 2009 National Standards Report • Educational and Behavioral Interventions • (Comprehensive Treatment packages) • Designed to achieve a broad learning or developmental impact on the core deficits of ASD • Strength of Evidence Ratings • 11 Established • 22 Emerging • 3 Unestablished • 0 Ineffective/harmful

  9. Criteria for Inclusion in the Study • Population/ Participants-Individuals with ASD between birth and 22 years of age • Interventions-Behavioral, developmental, or educational in nature and could be implemented in typical educational intervention settings (school, home, community) • Comparison-Interventions compared to no intervention or alternate intervention conditions • Outcomes-Behavioral, developmental, or academic outcomes • Study Design-Experimental group design, quasi-experimental group design, or single-case design

  10. Strength of Evidence Classification System • used to determine how confident we can be about the effectiveness of a treatment. Ratings reflect the level of quality, quantity, and consistency of research findings for each type of intervention. • Established. Sufficient evidence is available to confidently determine that a treatment produces favorable outcomes for individuals on the autism spectrum. That is, these treatments are established as effective. • Emerging. Although one or more studies suggest that a treatment produces favorable outcomes for individuals with ASD, additional high quality studies must consistently show this outcome before we can draw firm conclusions about treatment effectiveness. • Unestablished. There is little or no evidence to allow us to draw firm conclusions about treatment effectiveness with individuals with ASD. Additional research may show the treatment to be effective, ineffective, or harmful. • Ineffective/Harmful. Sufficient evidence is available to determine that a treatment is ineffective or harmful for individuals on the autism spectrum.

  11. 2009 NSP - 11 Established Comprehensive Treatments Antecedent Package Behavior Package Comprehensive Behavioral Treatment for Young Children Joint Attention Intervention Modeling Naturalistic Teaching Strategies Peer Training Package Pivotal Response Package Story-based Intervention Package Schedules Self-Management How many are you currently implementing?

  12. 2008 NPDC 24 Focused Interventions • Pivotal Response Training • Visual Supports • Structured Work Systems • Self-Management • Parent Implemented Intervention • Social Skills Training Groups • Speech Generating Devices • Computer Aided Instruction • Picture Exchange Communication • Extinction • Prompting • Antecedent- Based Intervention • Time Delay • Reinforcement • Task Analysis • Discrete Trial Training • Response Interruption/Redirection • Differential Reinforcement • Social Narratives • Video Modeling • Naturalistic Interventions • Peer Mediated Intervention

  13. Newly Updated 2014 NPDC EBP • Incorporate more recent studies (2007-2011) 456 articles • Expand timeframe (to 1970-1990) • Broader more rigorous review of studies 2014-EBP-Report

  14. Updated NPDC EBP • What’s IN • Cognitive Behavior Intervention • Structured Play Groups • Modeling including Video - Modeling • Exercise • Scripting • Technology based instruction and intervention* • What’s OUT • Structured work systems Do you have specific knowledge of the focused interventions and when/why to use them?

  15. Intervention Approaches • National Standards Project Comprehensive Treatment Model (CTMs) consist of a set of practices designed to achieve a broad learning or developmental impact on the core deficits of ASD. • National Professional Development Center for ASD Focused Intervention Practices are designed to address a single skill or goal of a student with ASD. These practices are operationally defined, address specific learner outcomes, and tend to occur over a shorter time period than CTMs.

  16. Selecting EBP Evidence Based Practice Autism Spectrum Disorders: Guide to Evidence-based Practice Missouri Guidelines Autism Initiative

  17. Selecting EBP Consider • Age of student • Environment/Setting • Individual characteristics • Skills to be taught • Capacity to implement • Include families • Involve students Non-examples • Pick a package and go with it • Do what feels right • This is what we have staff trained in • Parents are asking for this

  18. Supporting Family Involvement in EBP • Serve as a classroom volunteer • Maintain frequent communication • Attend school-sponsored events • Incorporate learning activities into home routines (working on greetings at grocery store) • Secure student input • Consider family culture, values, and socioeconomic status

  19. Building Sustainability with EBP • Step 1: Establish the Planning Team • Step 2: Problem Clarification and Needs Assessment • Step 3: Evaluating Outcomes • Step 4: Developing a Training Plan and a method to assess implementation fidelity • Step 5: Sustainability

  20. Taken from… Evidence-Based Practices for Children,Youth, and Young Adultswith Autism Spectrum Disorder Autism Evidence-Based Practice Review Group Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill The National Autism Center’s Evidence-Based Practice and Autism in the Schools A guide to providing appropriate interventions to students with autism spectrum disorders

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