Wednesday, August 3, 2011

How Can I Tell If My ABA/EIBT Program is Any Good? (Part Two)

Here are some warn signs that your child’s program may not be as effective as it should be:

Programs are consistently on acquisition for 2-4 months, or longer.


This may indicate that the programs are simply not being done, not enough time is spent on each program, that an appropriate task analysis has not been completed, or that the skills are not developmentally appropriate to the child’s current level of functioning.


Programs are not presented in a developmentally-logical order.


For example, conversation skills should be introduced after children are able to generate novel present-tense and past-tense descriptive sentences.


Your child has a tantrum when he/she is told “no.”


This may be an indication that insufficient rewards are being used, children are being allowed to repeatedly fail within programs, a task analysis has not been completed, or that developmentally-inappropriate skills are being targeted.


Skills are repeatedly gained and lost.


This may indicate that developmentally-inappropriate skills are being taught, mastered skills are not being integrated into subsequent higher-level programs, or skills are not being generalized to real-world settings.


Your child used to be very responsive to one-to-one instruction, but now tantrums when tutors introduce new tasks.


This may indicate that reinforcers have not been adapted for a child’s maturation. The impact of food and physical reinforcers tends to diminish for some children as they mature and develop a broader set of play skills and interests. This may also indicate developmentally-inappropriate tasks or insufficient task analysis.


Your child knows what a quadrilateral is, but can’t tell you what he/she had for lunch.


This suggests that intervention has focused on memorization skills (e.g., moving from 100 expressive object labels to 500 expressive object labels), rather than on increasing the complexity of communication skills (e.g., moving from one-word verbalizations to full-sentence verbalizations).


Your program list gradually drifts into all play-based, nonverbal activities.


This suggests that your team is losing reinforcement control, and is consequently reducing the demand level of the program to prevent noncompliance and tantrums.



Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Discrete-Trial Instruction During Circle Time?

I observed a special education class where the teacher told me that she uses discrete-trial instruction to conduct circle times. However, it just looked like a regular circle to me. Can one person use discrete-trial instruction with eight children at the same time?

Nope. No way. It sounds like this teacher is not really clear on what discrete-trial instruction means. Many public and private programs will claim that they incorporate components that are scientifically proven, or currently popular, whether they really do or not. Consequently, parents should always see classrooms in action (for 2-3 hours at least, not 20-30 minutes) before committing to them.

Sunday, May 29, 2011

How Can I Tell If My ABA/EIBT Program is Any Good? (Part One)


Here are some warn signs that your child’s program may not be as effective as it should be:



Recommended service levels differ from research-based levels.


Familiarize yourself with the scientific research on EIBT. If the scientific evidence recommends 30-40 hours per week for someone your child’s age, while your agency recommends 10…



The most experienced person you see on a weekly basis has less than 12 months of experience.

Effective EIBT programs involve a curriculum of 100’s of programs delivered over the course of 2-3 years. The person responsible for the weekly management of your child’s team needs years of experience.



No focus on rapid language acquisition.


Verbal communication skills are a critical prerequisite for preschool integration and peer socialization.



Dozens (or more) of programs are concurrently on acquisition, or dozens of programs are on maintenance.


To many concurrent programs slows down children’s acquisition rates, and makes it almost impossible for supervisors to effectively manage tutors’ implementation of each program (This is usually the product of inexperienced supervisors).



Your staff does not have instructional control of your child.



If your staff spends 50% of their time trying to coax, persuade, or sweet-talk your child into working, your 40-hour-per-week program is now a 20-hour-per-week program. EIBT is about trying to help children catch up with their neurotypical peers. The first skill they need to catch up on is cooperation and following instructions.

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Finding Play Dates - Approaching Other Families

For many families, finding peers for play dates turns out to be one of the most challenging aspects of maintaining an EIBT program. The process often involves approaching other parents that you don't know at all, and having to explain a fairly unusual set of circumstances. Sabrina Pedeupe, one of our parents, wrote a letter that we think is very eloquent and effective for these situations:


January 26, 2009

Dear Parents of Eric:

Our son Jason goes to preschool with Eric at KinderCare on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 9:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. We have a special request to ask you, but first let us tell you a bit about our son Jason.

Jason is 5 years old and just before he was 2 years old, he was diagnosed with autism. Jason has received in-home therapy services from a team of consultants and tutors ever since. Tutors accompany Jason to preschool as aides to help Jason as he transitions from activity to activity and intervene where necessary. One of the most important components of his program is the socialization skills he is learning and one of the best ways he can learn this is by interacting as much as possible with other normally developing children. Jason gets a lot of social interaction from the 3 mornings a week he attends school, but we are interested in arranging to have in-home play date sessions as well. Where our consultants have seen the greatest results with a child like Jason is if they can have these play dates with children they attend school with.

This is the special request we have of you. Two of the tutors who accompany Jason to school, Shea and Nicole, have observed Eric interacting well with Jason and while we understand your child may attend the full time day care program at KinderCare and therefore you are full-time working parents as well, we wondered if there is any way we can arrange to have a play date session with your child at our home once a week. Jason’s tutor would facilitate the play date (and let me tell you, your child would very much look forward to these weekly play dates at our house as the tutors come up with all kinds of fun activities for our children to do each week).

If you are interested, please contact me at my cell phone number 555-4454 to arrange a time where we can all meet and then discuss a time that would work for Eric to come for weekly 30 to 45-minute play date sessions. The tutors can be somewhat flexible as we come up with a time that works best for all of us.

Thank you for your time and we look forward to hearing from you soon.

Sincerely,


Sabrina

Jason’s Mom