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EDUCATIONAL HELPS ...
Teaching Students with Autism.
ERIC Identifier: ED435148
Publication Date: 1999-10-00
Author: Dunlap, Glen - Fox, Lise
Approx. 6 pages when printed.
Source: ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities and
Gifted Education Reston VA.
Teaching Students with Autism. ERIC Digest E582.
THIS DIGEST WAS CREATED BY ERIC, THE EDUCATIONAL
RESOURCES INFORMATION CENTER. FOR MORE INFORMATION
ABOUT ERIC, CONTACT ACCESS ERIC 1-800-LET-ERIC
Autism is a disability syndrome characterized
principally by significant problems in the
development of communication and social functioning.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) encompasses a broad
definition of autism that includes related
disabilities such as Asperger Syndrome, Rett's
Syndrome, and Pervasive Developmental Disorder.
Autism and ASD are labels describing students with a
great range of abilities and disabilities, including
individuals with severe intellectual challenges as
well as students who are intellectually gifted. With
appropriate teaching, all students with autism can
learn.
This digest provides an overview of considerations
for teaching students with autism. Students with
autism are, first and foremost, students. They have
many more similarities to other students than they do
differences. Although some students with autism
present genuine instructional challenges, they learn
well with appropriate, systematic, and individualized
teaching practices.
SOME GENERAL CONSIDERATIONS OF THE INSTRUCTIONAL
CONTEXT
To provide effective instruction for students with
autism, some general considerations should be
addressed:
-
Ensure that the student is in good health, free
from pain and irritation, and in a safe,
stimulating and pleasurable setting.
-
Provide structure in the environment, with clear
guidelines regarding expectations for appropriate
and inappropriate behavior.
-
Provide tools, such as written or picture
schedules, to ensure that the flow of activities is
understandable and predictable.
-
Base the curriculum on the student's individual
characteristics, not on the label of autism. A
diagnosis of autism does not indicate what or how
to teach.
-
Focus on developing skills that will be of use in
the student's current and future life in
school, home, and community.
-
Carefully plan transitions to new placements and
new school experiences usually require careful
planning and assistance.
-
Encourage parents and other family members to
participate in the process of assessment,
curriculum planning, instruction, and monitoring.
They often have the most useful information about
the student's history and learning
characteristics, so effective instruction should
take advantage of this vital resource.
COMMUNICATION ISSUES
Students with autism have significant challenges in
understanding and using language for communication.
Classroom environments must provide students with
information on events, activities, and expectations
in a manner that students with autism can easily
understand. Visual activity schedules may be used to
provide students with an overview of the
instructional day and information on tasks that will
be assigned. Many teachers also find mini-schedules
helpful; they provide a visual analysis of the steps
in a task or assignment that need completion by the
student. In addition to providing supports for
understanding classroom expectations, many students
will also need supports for communicating to others.
While most students with autism will learn to use
speech to communicate, many still have great
difficulty in expressing their needs and desires.
They may need to use visual systems, sign language,
or augmentative devices as an additional form of
expressive communication.
MOTIVATIONAL ISSUES
It is important that the classroom environment
provides activities and materials that are
interesting and motivating. Actively engaging the
student within instructional activities is critical
to effective instruction. The teacher should observe
the student in multiple activities and interview
family members to identify the motivating activities
or objects for the student. These preferred objects
and activities may be used for instruction, or as
reinforcers for activity engagement or completion.
Instructional arrangements should also provide
opportunities for choice-making to the student.
Research has shown that when students have an
opportunity to choose the activity, location, or
materials for an instructional task, they are more
likely to be engaged in the activity. Providing the
student with frequent and personally meaningful
reinforcement is often critical to sustaining
motivation to engage in instruction and persist with
activities.
INSTRUCTIONAL FORMATS
Discrete trial training is an effective
instructional format for teaching specific skills in
an intensive, efficient manner. Skills are taught
within a highly structured, one-to-one format
providing clear and concise instruction, an
additional prompt (as necessary), and an explicit
reinforcer (reward) for performing the skill
successfully. Discrete trial training typically uses
a least-to-most prompting hierarchy, moving from a
verbal prompt to physical guidance when verbal and
nonverbal prompts are inadequate. Trials of
instruction are provided on a single behavior in a
massed fashion (one after another) with only a brief
pause between trials.
Activity-based instruction describes the instruction
of targeted skills within activities and routines
that are meaningful for the student. Instructional
trials are embedded within student-initiated,
routine, or planned activities. Skills are taught
within relevant activities and across contexts,
increasing the probability that the student will
generalize the skill to noninstructional activities
and environments. For example, an arrival routine for
a student may include putting his backpack away,
finding his desk, and taking out his daily work
folder. If the student were learning how to greet
others, request help, and follow a visual schedule,
skill instruction could be embedded in the arrival
routine and within multiple activities over the day
so that an adequate number of instructional trials
are provided to the student. Systematic instruction
is used within each of those activities to provide
instruction on the embedded skill.
Students with autism may also be taught effectively
in small groups. In inclusive classrooms, nondisabled
peers have been effective in providing instructional
support. Cooperative learning groups also provide a
format for includeing the student with autism who may
be learning skills that are different from his peers.
POSITIVE BEHAVIOR SUPPORT
Some students with autism may exhibit excessive
passivity, while others display patterns of
disruptive or even destructive behaviors. Years ago,
the common response to these behaviors was
punishment, time out, or exclusion to stop or
suppress the behavior problems. The currently
preferred approach is known as positive behavior
support (PBS), a proactive, constructive educational
approach for resolving behavior problems. It is based
on extensive research as well as principles regarding
the rights of all students to be treated with dignity
and to have access to educational opportunities. The
PBS approach is supported by the discipline
regulations of the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (IDEA).
PBS involves a functional behavioral assessment
(FBA) and the subsequent development and
implementation of an individualized behavior support
plan. The FBA process gathers information about the
purpose or "function" of the behavior and
the circumstances associated with its occurrences and
nonoccurrences. The results of the FBA contribute to
the individualized behavior support plan, which
usually includes procedures for teaching alternatives
to the behavior problems, and alterations to the
environmental and instructional circumstances most
associated with the problems. Such alterations can
involve aspects of the curriculum, instructional
techniques, social milieu or other feature linked by
the FBA to behavior problems. The PBS intervention
helps prevent problems from occurring, and helps the
student acquire more effective, desirable ways for
interacting with the environment.
AGE SPAN CONSIDERATIONS
The focus of instruction shifts as students with
autism move from early childhood programs through
elementary school to secondary settings. In the early
years, instruction focuses on developing
communication, social interaction, and adaptive
behavior. As the child ages, elementary programs may
focus more on academic instruction in addition to
teaching language and social interaction skills. In
secondary programs, instruction should shift to
preparing the student for adulthood.
Instruction for young children should begin as soon
as the disability is identified. Effective early
intervention programs are ones that directly teach
early communication and social interaction skills,
use a functional approach in addressing problem
behavior, provide intensive and systematic
instruction, provide parent instruction and family
support, and provide transition support as the child
enters preschool.
In elementary school, instruction should support the
child's growth in skill areas that are delayed
and promote growth in areas of strength. Curriculum
adaptations may be used to assist students in
progressing in the traditional academic areas. School
programs should also focus on helping the student
learn how to negotiate social environments and
develop friendships.
In the secondary and high school years, instruction
should focus on the areas identified in the
transition plan. The transition plan addresses
post-school outcomes for work, community living,
community participation, and recreation activities.
Instruction for the transitioning student may include
community work experience, using public
transportation, and learning skills that will be
important for living in the community. In high
school, instruction may continue within general
education settings although an individual
student's schedule may reflect a greater emphasis
on the importance of learning relevant post-school
skills. For example, a student's schedule may
include classes in computer, cooking, and chorus
instead of courses in chemistry, algebra, and
American literature.
REFERENCES
Carr, E. G., Horner, R. H., Turnbull, A. P.,
Marquis, J. G., McLaughlin, D. M., McAtee, M. L.,
Smith, C. E., Ryan, K. A., Ruef, M. B., Doolabh, A.,
& Braddock, D. (1999). Positive behavior support
for people with developmental disabilities: A research
synthesis. American Association on Mental
Retardation.
Dawson, G., & Osterling, J. (1997). Early
intervention in autism. In M. J. Guralnick (Ed.), The
effectiveness of early intervention (pp. 307-326).
Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes Publishing.
Dunlap, G., DePerczel, M., Clarke, S., Wilson,
D., Wright, S., White, R., & Gomez, A. (1994).
Choice making and proactive behavioral support for
students with emotional and behavioral challenges.
Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis (27),
505-518.
Koegel, L. K., Koegel, R. L., & Dunlap, G.
(Eds.) (1996). Positive behavioral support: Including
people with difficult behavior in the community.
Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes Publishing.
Olley, J. G. & Reeve, C. E. (1997). Issues
of Curriculum and Classroom Structure. In D. J. Cohen
& F. R. Volkmar (Eds.), Handbook of Autism and
Pervasive Developmental Disorders. 2nd ed. (484-508).
New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Peck, C. A. (1985). Increasing opportunities for
social control by children with autism and severe
handicaps: Effects on student behavior and perceived
classroom climate. The Journal of he Association for
Persons with Severe Handicaps (10)
183-193.
Westling, D. & Fox, L. (2000). Teaching
students with severe disabilities. 2nd ed. Upper Saddle
River, NJ: Merrill.
ERIC DIGESTS are in the public domain and may be
freely reproduced and disseminated, but please
acknowledge your source. This digest was prepared
with funding from the Office of Educational Research
and Improvement, U.S. Department of Education under
Contract No. ED-CO-99-0026. The opinions expressed in
this publication do not necessarily reflect the
positions or policies of OERI or the Department of
Education.
Title: Teaching Students with Autism. ERIC Digest
E582.
Document Type: Information Analyses---ERIC
Information Analysis Products (IAPs) (071);
Information Analyses---ERIC Digests (Selected) in
Full Text (073);
Available From: ERIC Clearinghouse on Disabilities
and Gifted Education, The Council for Exceptional
Children, 1920 Association Dr., Reston, VA
20191-1589. Tel: 800-328-0272 (Toll Free); e-mail:
ricec@cec.sped.org. For full text: .
Descriptors: Age Differences, Autism, Behavior
Modification, Classroom Communication, Classroom
Environment, Classroom Techniques, Educational
Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Feedback,
Student Motivation, Student Needs, Teacher Student
Relationship, Teaching Methods
Identifiers: ERIC Digests, Functional Behavioral
Assessment
Copyright © 2007 ASGC. All rights reserved. Autism Society of Greater Cleveland P.O. Box 41066, Brecksville, Ohio 44141 (216) 556-4937
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