Section 5: Treatment and Intervention
74 Six Effective Educational Components for ASD
1. Individualized Supports and Services
- The program should be discussed to ensure it addresses your concerns.
- It should incorporate your child’s interests and preferences.
- It should use your child’s strengths/weaknesses to set the intervention.
2. Systematic Instruction
- The program should identify specific educational goals for the student.
- The National Research Council (NRC, 2001) suggests that appropriate, educational objectives are observable, measurable behaviors and skills.
- It should include plans for generalization and maintenance.
- It should evaluate its effectiveness; data collection should be encouraged.
- The program should allow for modifications as necessary.
3. Comprehensible/Structured Learning Environments
- The curriculum must be clear to the student and educational personnel.
- Comprehensible environments allow students to predict what will happen next, know the requirements for each setting, and learn a variety of skills.
- Use visual cues that:
- Organize the setting
- Provide a schedule
- Carefully provide choices
- Provide behavioral support
- Define areas of the room
- Highlight the passage of time
- Facilitate transitions/flexibility
- Are for individualized needs
4. Specialized Curriculum Content
- Emphasize content targeting social interaction and communication.
- Teach social skills: initiating/responding to others and leisure skills.
- Focus on skills that help the student control his/her environment, increase independence and quality of life, and increase his/her performance.
5. Functional Approach to Problem Behavior
- Recognize that behaviors are communication
- Learn the function (meaning) of problem behaviors:
- Attention seeking
- Avoidance
- Gaining items
- Sensory needs
- Teach new skills to replace inappropriate behaviors (Swiezy et al., 2005).
6. Family Involvement
- Your family is essential in planning and delivery of supports and services.
- Interventions work best when utilized in multiple settings (including home)
- Consider your resources (time, money) and goals; inform school of any circumstances that may interfere with the program.
- IDEA mandates that schools must include parents in the IEP process.
- Families should be taught ways to teach skills/address home behaviors (NRC, 2001).
Reference:
Iovannone, R., Dunlap, G., Huber, H., & Kincaid, D. (2003). Effective educational practices for students with Autism Spectrum Disorders. Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities, 18, 150-165.