Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Visual Schedule 

source: Susan Stokes

Definition: A daily visual schedule is a critical component in a structured environment. A visual schedule will tell the student with autism what activities will occur and in what sequence.
  • Visual schedules are important for children with autism because they:
    • Help address the child's difficulty with sequential memory and organization of time.
    • Assist children with language comprehension problems to understand what is expected of them (5).
    • Lessen the anxiety level of children with autism, and thus reduce the possible occurrence of challenging behaviors, by providing the structure for the student to organize and predict daily and weekly events. Schedules clarify that activities happen within a specific time period (e.g., understanding that "break time" is coming, but after "work time"), and also alert the student to any changes that might occur.
    • Assist the student in transitioning independently between activities and environments by telling them where they are to go next (5). Visual schedules can be used in all environments (e.g., classroom, gym, Occupational Therapy, Speech/Language Therapy, home, Sunday School, etc.).

  • Are based on a "first-then" strategy; that is, "first you do ___, then you do ___", rather than an "if-then" approach (i.e., "if you do ___, then you can do___"). This first-then strategy allows the "first" expectation (whether a task, activity or assignment) to be modified, as needed. The modification is in terms of task completion and amount of prompting, in order to accommodate the student's daily fluctuations in his ability to process in-coming information. Then he can move on to his next visually scheduled task/activity.

"First-Then" Card

Example: A student is having particular difficulty completing a math worksheet, due to anxiety, sensory processing difficulties, communication, difficulty generalizing, internal/external distracters, change, etc. The assignment can be modified so that the child only has to complete three math problems first, and then he has a sensory break, as indicated on his visual schedule.

  • Can incorporate various social interactions into the student's daily schedule (e.g. showing completed work to a teacher/parent for social reinforcement, requiring appropriate social greetings).
  • Can increase a student's motivation to complete less desired activities by strategically alternating more preferred with less-preferred activities on the student's individual visual schedule.
  • Example: By placing a "computer" time after "math", the student may be more motivated to complete math knowing that "computer" time will be next.

    A visual schedule for a student with autism must be directly taught and consistently used. Visual schedules should not be considered as "crutches" for students with autism, from which they should gradually be "weaned". Instead, these individual visual schedules should be considered as "prosthetic" or "assistive tech" devices. For the student with autism, the consistent use of a visual schedule is an extremely important skill. It has the potential to increase independent functioning throughout his life - at school, home and community.

  • Developing Visual Schedules: In general, schedules should be arranged from a "top-to-bottom" or "left-to-right" format, including a method for the student to manipulate the schedule to indicate that an activity is finished or "all done" .
Example: Cross/mark off with a dry erase marker, place the item in an "all done" envelope/box, check off the item, draw a line through the scheduled activity, etc.

  • A minimum of two scheduled items should be presented at a time so that the student begins to understand that events and activities happen in a sequential manner, not in isolation.
  • Schedules can be designed using a variety of formats, depending upon the needs of the individual student.

"Visual Schedule"

Example: Object schedule, 3 ring binder schedule, clipboard schedule, manila file folder schedules, dry erase board schedules, Velcro strip across the top of the desk, etc.

  • Various visual representation systems can be used for an individual visual schedule including:
    Real objects;
    Photographs (e.g., "Picture This" software program or own photos);
    Realistic drawings;
    Commercial picture system (e.g., "Boardmaker" software program);
    Written words/lists.

"Visual Schedule"

  • Individual Schedule: It is necessary to develop an individual schedule for the child with autism in addition to the general classroom schedule.
    • An individual schedule will give the child with autism important information in a visual form that he can readily understand.
    • Another consideration when individualizing a schedule for a student with autism is the length of the schedule (number of activities). The length of the schedule may need to be modified due to the student becoming increasingly obsessed and/or anxious regarding an up-coming scheduled activity, or due to difficulty in processing "too much" information presented at once.
    • Example: A particular student "obsesses" over recess. If at the beginning of his day he sees "recess" scheduled later in the morning, he will continue to be obsessed with "going out for recess", resulting in increased anxiety and distractibility for the rest of the morning activities until recess. The student's schedule could be created with a few activity items at a time, up until recess. Again, individualization is the key to success.

    • Check Schedule. Some students may need a "check schedule" visual physical prompt to teach them to independently check their schedule, as well as learn the importance of their schedule.
    • Example: "Check schedule" visual prompts can be made by writing the student's name on laminated colored paper strips or using popsicle sticks or poker chips with a large check printed on the chip, etc.

      The "check schedule" prompts are visual and physical cues (as opposed to adult prompts) given to the student for any transition in his daily activities, to cue him to check his schedules.
      A child who relies too heavily on adult prompts rather than using "check schedule" prompts in with his schedule, may have more difficulty understanding the importance of his schedule and have limited success in using it.
    • Transitions. Some students may need to transition to the next scheduled activity by taking their scheduled item (card or object) off their individual schedule and carrying this with them to the next activity/location. This may be due to the child's increased distractibility in maneuvering through the environment. The distractibility, or inability to sustain attention throughout the transition, is independent of the child's cognitive functioning level or verbal skills.
    • Example: Some non-verbal students with autism, who function at a younger cognitive level, do not require transition schedule cards to get to the next scheduled activity. On the other hand certain higher functioning students with autism require a transition card to get to the next scheduled activity, due to their increased distractability.

Visual Schedules to Support Classroom Management

As a Tool for the Whole Class or Individuals,

      a Visual Schedule Supports Success

Visual schedules are one of the most effective tools to facilitate transitioning from one activity to the next. Often, young children with severe enough disabilities that they have little expressive language will have difficulty with transitions, because they don't actually understand them. Certainly, all children, when they are young, struggle with understanding the temporal, specifically the lapse of time, but for children with little language time is an abstraction they have absolutely not way to understand. Visual schedules can introduce children to the notion of "First this, and then this . . . , " the notion that activities come in sequences and that you can know what events occur in those sequences.

Prior Knowledge

It helps if you start pairing pictures to events or objects in the classroom. If you are using a picture communication system, your children will already have an understanding of the symbols. If not, there are two fronts to attack the symbols:
    Visual Schedules to Support Classroom Management
  1. Use picture symbols around the classroom to identify objects that are in common use. Place the picture symbol for scissors on the container where the scissors are kept, or place the symbol for pencil near the pencil sharpener.
  2. Teach the children who are the least familiar or most challenged with the use of symbols to communicate, how to use the picture symbols. This will require a discrete trial program that teaches your students to discriminate between pictures symbols, or to match a symbol to a three dimensional object. (i.e. "Put the picture with the pencil, Johnny.")

Picture Symbols

The first step of Picture Exchange training is to teach your student to match a picture to the object itself, or two dimensional to three dimensional matching. Two sets of pictures symbols that you may have access to are Pogo Boards, or Board Maker. Pogo Boards is a web based program that you can access from your home. (I did in for the illustration above.) Board Maker requires that you purchase a program (rather than a subscription as in Pogo Boards) from Mayer-Johnson, the publisher. You need to have a disk with the artwork on it in order to create your picture symbols.
For children with language, who don't need the picture symbols in order to understand language, the picture symbols can serve the same purpose as a "rebus ." Poor readers will still understand that the symbol stands for something, in the case of picture schedules, that is about to happen next.

Create Your Picture Schedule.

Create the picture schedules you will use either to serve the needs of individual students (if you have students who could read a list, and don't require pictures,) or that will be understandable by the student with the weakest receptive communication. For students who are not quite getting the whole "symbol" thing, you might want to start them with a schedule created from photographs of the things, photographs you can either take with a smart phone or digital camera and quickly print on cardstock and make up as laminated picture symbols. A great source for these pictures would be Google Images, which snag images from the web and provide them for free to end users like teachers, who will not be selling the images for a profit.
Pairing Putting words on the cards (as I did with my sample) will start students with receptive language to begin to associate the words with the pictures. Some students on the autism spectrum will actually begin to read words before they are creating independent language (expressive language.)  

Schedules for the Whole Class:

Picture schedules can become part of your whole class routine, especially if you have several students with lower function who stress over transitions. Knowing that "first you do . . .then you do" is part of daily routines, it will give students a sense of safety and help them understand. You could create your schedule in several ways:
  • In a pocket chart. If you are introducing reading skills, a pocket chart will support left to right ordering. Make the cards for your schedule for the day and keep them in a card file. Pull the cards for a particular day, and place them with your students in the pocket chart together, and talk about what you do on Wednesday, or Thursday, etc.
  • Schedule Strip This may mimic what your students have on their desks. On a long, narrow piece of poster board, place a strip of velco, male or female-but be sure that your create all the places this will rest in the same way. Place the schedule on the strip, top to bottom, and have students remove the pictures as you complete each activity.
  • Clear plastic food storage bags Mount the storage bags on a board, with a row for the morning and a row for the afternoon. Glue a clock face under the spot where you will place each activity card, where you can use a dry erase marker to put the hands on your clocks. Laminate the board before you mount the bags. Put a card for each activity in the bags, and have students remove them as you complete the schedule.

Schedules for Individual Students

Some students have more difficulty than others with transitions, especially students with Autism Spectrum Disorders, and need to feel some control over time. Creating a schedule just for them will give them a sense of control. You may also add in some "choice" spots on individual schedules to make them work with your reinforcement system, either a visual schedule or a token board. There are several ways to make this schedule
  • A Schedule Folder: This works well for individual children who need to have something in hand in order to be successful. Place Velcro on the pictures as well as on the outside of the folder. Either place Velcro, or attach a quart zippered storage bag to the back of the folder. Place with the child the schedule for the morning, and have the child remove and move the pictures for each event.
  • A Schedule Strip: This would work well if you are modeling the schedule strip for the whole class. Then you can call attention to your students and model removing the activity from the strip. Be sure your students have a zippered bag or pencil box to place them in when they finish.
  • A Flip Book: Laminate and punch a hole in the top left corner of each picture card. Place them in the order. You want a "cover card" that is different or bigger, perhaps with a picture of the students and the title "Jonathon's Schedule." Place this where the student can see it, and have him or her flip each activity they complete to the back. It also makes it possible for you to review the schedule with the student, one page at a time.

Use Your Schedules!

Use the schedule consistently and model for your staff how you want the schedule used. If you have an easy going group, you may not need to be so much a stickler, but for students who get anxious, it provides consistent structure. It is even an effective method for teaching students to be more flexible. If you have a special event like an assembly, you can talk about how you need to take an activity out of your schedule to make room for the "something special" that you will be doing with the other students at your school!
  

Expressive Language 

Language that a Child Uses Him or Herself

Source: Quoted from Jerry Webster at About.com
This Article provides a clear understanding of expressive language

Expressive Language is language that the individual creates to express him or herself. Usually it refers to spoken language, though even when this language is supported by pictures or devices, as long as it creates communication it is effectively expressive language.
Expressive language usually follow "receptive language," the ability for the individual child to understand and respond appropriately to language spoken by others. Receptive language is usually built by teaching small children to pair words with items and then imitating in order to pair actions with directives, i.e. "sit down." "Stand up." "Clap your hands . . ." etc.
Verbal Behavioral Analysis (VBA) uses the behaviorist strategies of ABA to build language. The first skill necessary for a child to acquire receptive language is "manding" or the ability to make a request for an item, an activity, or a need. Because manding creates a change in the child's world that the child has initiated, this is the strongest form of expressive language, the proverbial horse that pulls the cart of language. When a child begins to "mand," the other forms of language according to VBA, tacting (naming objects or people in the environment) and finally intra-verbals (asking questions, juxtaposing two things in a sentence: "Is that a hot dog or a bratwurst?") are not far behind.  


Expressive language is an important step toward full participation in society, but often children who struggle with building language also need to build social skills and need explicit social skills training to be successful.

Examples: Jonathon began using expressive language when he found he could get a piggy back from his favorite therapist just by asking for it! (Manding)            
Getty ImagesParticipation requires expressive language

Receptive Language 

Responding to Spoken Language

Source: Quoting Jerry Webster on About.com
This article provides a clear understanding of receptive language. 

Definition:
Language, like all communication, is a two way street. Incoming language is receptive language. When a child understands commands, directives or single words used as questions, we say that he or she has "receptive language." It is one way on the two way street, and indicates that children with disabilities understand that spoken words have meaning.

Receptive Language can be seen when a child is given a verbal command or prompt and responds appropriately. I.e.: The teacher says "John, please sit down." John sits down. That is an example of receptive language. Another example would be if a teacher asks a student "Lucy, point to the giraffe," and Lucy points to the picture of the giraffe, and not the picture of the gorilla.
Receptive language may or may not be the gateway to expressive language. The ability to understand simple commands may lead to language production, but some children may not physically have the ability to make spoken sounds (called aphasia.) Still, receptive language is critical for them to develop alternate means of communication, such as picture exchanges, American Sign Language (ASL) or augmented communication.
Receptive language can be built by pairing it with pictures, imitation and commands, using discrete trial training. The breakthrough skill for Verbal Behavior Analysis (VBA) is "manding" or making a request. Like the "exchange" part of picture exchange, it requires that the student make a verbal effort to initiate an interaction.

Examples: Julian does not speak: he will point to something he wants or take an adult to the refrigerator of television to get what he wants. In his discrete trial session, he is learning to follow simple verbal directives and to discriminate between pictures as a way to develop receptive language.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014


                     

     Help everyone make a smooth transition
Articles for kids:
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Articles for your students' parents:


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The Keyboarding Without Tears curriculum teaches pre-keyboarding and keyboarding in grades K-5 with engaging lessons and activities that are based on how children learn best.

Try Sample Lessons →  







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These apps tap your child's inner artist and offer endless amounts of open-ended play. See the list here.         

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