CLASS/WORKSHOP/READING 3 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the role of the SLT within ASD services?

according to RCSLT, 2015

A
  • Key member of ASD specialist team
  • Contribute to differential diagnosis and planning of intervention
  • Promoting an autism & communication friendly environment
  • Reduce risks associated with ASD: communication and mental health difficulties
  • Establish effective, acceptable, and accessible means of communication (e.g. AAC)
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2
Q

What are the key principles of intervention?

according to NICE, 2013

A
  • Family and person centred approach
  • Focus on function and participation
  • Adapt environment (social and physical)
  • Preventative (anticipate transitions)
  • Adjustments to the way care is delivered (e.g. scheduled apt. to minimise waiting times)
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3
Q

What makes an “autism-friendly” environment?

NICE, 2013

A
  • Visual supports (pictures, symbols, printed words)
  • Consideration for personal sensitivities: lighting, noise, distractions, over stimulation
  • Routine and structure, personal space, time out
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4
Q

How can an SLT make a communication-friendly environment?

A
  • Adjust to the families preferences and the settings resources
  • Increase the understanding and responsiveness of the key communication partners
  • Encourage parent-, teacher-, and peer- mediation
  • Employ evidence based strategies: e.g. therapist modelling, video-interaction feedback etc.
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5
Q

When a child has ‘behaviour that challenges’ what is important for the SLT to consider before planning intervention?

A
  • How frequent/ persisting is the behaviour?
  • How does the behaviour impact family/ relationships/ education/ opportunities
  • Is this behaviour a result of difficulty understanding or expressing a need or want?
  • Is it a response to changes, pain or physical disorder, mental health problems?
  • Is there an aspect of the physical or social environment that is causing difficulties
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6
Q

What would intervention for these ‘behaviours that challenge’ include?

A
  • Anticipate and prevent these behaviours where possible
  • Understand the underlying functions which the behaviour may serve?
  • Facilitate an alternative and more acceptable way for the child to meet that function
  • Assess factors which may contribute to or increase risk?
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7
Q

What specific intervention approaches are there for ASD?

A
  • FCT (functional communication training)
  • Social Stories
  • PECS
  • Video-feedback
  • Peer Mediation
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8
Q

What is Functional Communication Training?

A
  • Replacing a problem behaviour with an alternative
  1. Asses the function the behaviour currently serves (any
    possible triggers, unintended and intended
    consequences and reinforcers)
  2. Select appropriate alternative (Must fufill exact same
    function, be hassle free, and be accessable and
    recognisable by others)
  3. Teach alternative and fade out prompts
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9
Q

What are some considerations for the FCT approach?

A
  • Requires optimism (from families carers: believe they’re making a difference)
  • Hard to introduce new behaviour while old one persists
  • Can be seen as ‘giving in’
  • Needs skills to engineer/teach new responses
  • Demands of new response may seem excessive
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10
Q

What is PECS?

A

Picture Exchange Communication System (1994)

  • A picture/ icon based AAC system, for people with limited, or no, verbal abilities
  • Person with ASD initiates self motivated requests
  • Requires training
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11
Q

What are some of the Expressive and Receptive targets of PECS?

A

Expressive:

  • Requesting help
  • Requesting a break
  • Requesting an item or activity
  • Affirming offers for desired items/activities
  • Rejecting undesired items or activities

Receptive:

  • Following a direction to wait
  • Responding to directions
  • Following visual scehdules
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12
Q

What are the 6 stages of PECS?

A
  1. Exchange icon for item, 2 teachers, close proximity
  2. Wider number of icons/items, more partners, shorter distance
  3. Child must now choose from an array of icons (Some undesired)
  4. Requests in complete sentences (e.g. saying “I want raisins”)
  5. Answer questions using the icons (e.g. answering “What do you want?”)
  6. Expanding usage. Using PECS to comment.
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13
Q

What are Social Stories? What can they be used to target?

A

A carefully written, personalised story, usually accompanied by visual support (e.g. pictures).
Focus on how person with ASD thinks and feels.
Designed to facilitate social understanding or to target a specific challenging situation.

Used to:

  • Promote positive behaviours
  • Promote social skills (e.g. sharing)
  • Target a behaviour that challenges
  • Target mood (anxiety)
  • Introduce planned changes (Transitions)
  • Address pragmatic impairments (interrupting)
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14
Q

What is video modelling? What are the benefits?

A

Video of someone demonstrating a targeted behaviour/skill. The person demonstrating the skill can be a friend or family member of the individual, an animation or the individual themselves.

Benefits:

  • plays on the fact that people with ASD typically have an interest in video
  • can be used to develop any skill
  • Readily available and easy to use
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15
Q

What is peer mediation?

A

Equipping one or more peer(s) without disabilities to provide ongoing social and academic support.
(under staff guidance)

Social:

  • Peer interacts with individual
  • The peer will network to establishing a social group around the focus student with ASD

academic:

  • Peer tutoring (direct academic support)
  • Peer will work with individual within a cooperative learning group (small group, shared goals, assigned roles, collaborative achievement)
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16
Q

What does the chosen peer in peer-mediation need to be?

A
  • Be competent communicators
  • Have strong interpersonal skills
  • Have high social status
  • Be keen to do it
  • Be able to implement the training