Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Apps for Autism

This was worth passing on as is. I would not do this article justice if I tried to edit it and put it in my words. Enjoy!

As Discussed on CBS’s 60 Minutes
New Book for You


 If you cannot see this picture click on the X



Apps for Autism
An Essential Guide to Over 200 Effective Apps for Improving Communication, Behavior, Social Skills, and More!

Autism? There’s an app for that!

Actually, there are more than 200 apps for autism, and this book will guide you through them so you can confidently utilize today’s technology to maximize your child or student’s success!

Speech Language Pathologist Lois Jean Brady wrote this book in order to educate parents, teachers, and other professionals about the breakthrough method she calls “iTherapy”—which is the use of Apple products (iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch) and various apps (computer applications) in meeting students’ individual educational goals.

Lois believes that all persons on the spectrum can learn how to use technology in a way that is relevant to them. She shares important tips on how to use apps responsibly and effectively by maintaining a child-centered, team approach to teaching and learning, taking into account the individual’s interests, strengths/challenges, vision, motor planning, attention, sensory processing, memory, cognitive ability, environment, and access to tools. Lois also coaches adults on how they can use prompting and reinforcement techniques to help establish and generalize skills learned, until students are able to consistently demonstrate the skills in various environments (home, school, etc.).

For those who are new to the wonderful world of apps, worry not! Lois provides helpful sections on how to get started, including: Choosing an iDevice, Basic iDevice Operations, Opening an Account, How to Download an App from iTunes, and more!

You will be astonished and excited by the number of apps available, and the vast variety of issues they can address:
  • Voice Output
  • Sign Language
  • One-Touch Switch
  • Text-to-Speech
  • Articulation
  • Encouragement
  • Listening and Auditory Processing
  • Language Comprehension
  • Vocabulary
  • Concept Development
  • Video Modeling
  • Social Skills Group Activities
  • Eye Contact and Body Language
  • Hygiene & Pre-Vocational
  • Graphic Organizers & Visual Supports
  • Visual Timers
  • Sound Masking
  • Handwriting
  • Bilateral Coordination
  • Motor Planning
  • Activities of Daily Living
  • Reading
  • Spelling
  • Math
  • Preschool
  • Dysphagia
  • Aphasia, Apraxia & Dysarthria
  • Stuttering
  • Music, Songs & Creativity
  • Information about Autism
  • Eating Gluten Free
  • And more!
Meet the Author:
Lois Brady, M.A., CCC-SLP, is passionate about working with the special needs community. She found her calling while in high school, when she spent her summer breaks volunteering in camp programs for children with special needs. Lois has over two decades of experience working as a Speech Language Pathologist specializing in Autism Spectrum Disorder. She has earned a Master’s degree in Speech-Language Pathology, Certificate in Assistive Technology, Certificate in Computer Based Intervention, and has completed an Animal Assisted Therapy Program. Lois coauthored the book Speech in Action, featuring approaches that combine occupational therapy, adaptive physical education, and speech-language pathology, and is currently conducting research in communication disorders and developing products (apps) to enhance communication and language.
Meet the Author:
"Lois has taken an important leap in writing this book, providing a much-needed primer for considering the newest, mobile, educational technologies … For parents, teachers, and therapists, it is important to understand what the individual apps can and cannot do, and to be able to carefully consider features relevant to individual needs. From communication to literacy, recreation, and accessories, Apps for Autism provides a wealth of useful information to read and reference." —Samuel Sennott, a Ph.D. Student in Special Education and Augmentative and Alternative Communication at the Pennsylvania State University

Sunday, November 13, 2011

Week 10 Social Skills Playhouse; Making and Maintaining Friends

Friendship is like a garden of flowers, fine and rare. It cannot reach perfection except through loving care. Then new and lovely blossoms with each day appear...for friendship like a garden, grows in beauty year by year. Anonymous

F.R.I.E.N.D.S
F.riend Files
R.easonable Expectations
I.nterests and Invitations
E.xceptional Behavior
N.on verbal Communication
D.o it- Spiral of Social Success
S.et Realistic Goals

This week\we will be focusing class on assisting you and your children in transitioning their classmates into "friends" via our friend file exercise and contact information exchange. 

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Week 9 Social Skills Playhouse; Perspective Taking

Here we are on our second to last session of the Fall semsester and have evolved to the highest level of our PEOPLE rubric, Perspective taking, the ability to take other's thoughts, ideas and personality into account. The concept of "theory of the mind"

Homework this week...

Observe your child's perspective taking, how has it changed? Do you see them understanding where others are coming from?  How do you "get" other people?

"How do we understand each other? Although we are rarely explicitly aware of it, we utilize notions of invisible, intangible, and yet pragmatically very useful entities such as intentions, desires, beliefs, and knowledge to make human and animal behavior comprehensible and predictable. So automatic are these processes of inferences and attributions that it is not until something goes wrong that their extraordinary characteristics become salient and present themselves to our awareness" Francis F. Steen, Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles.

Friday, November 4, 2011

Social Skills Playhouse Lead Social Coach Scott Nipper to present at the ADDA-SR NW Houston Chapter Meeting

Topic:        Smart but Scattered
This presentation will offer a practical and parent friendly approach to teaching executive skills. Scott will share from a personal and professional perspective the vital importance of learning executive functioning skills.

Speaker:   Scott Nipper
Scott has almost 2 decades of professional experience in special needs as a teacher and behavior analyst.  He studied autism intervention in graduate school and specialized in Aspergers Syndrome.  His knowledge of dyslexia and ADHD is much more personal as a learner.    

Time:          November 8, 2011, 7:00-8:30 pm (2nd Tuesday)

Place:        Foundry United Methodist Church
                        8350 Jones Road, room to be announced, look for signs

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

Week 8 Social Skills Playhouse, Executive Function: A new lens for viewing your child

By Kristin Stanberry

As each of us goes about daily life, numerous mental processes and skills help us plan for — and respond to — the tasks, challenges, and opportunities we face. Researchers and psychologists have coined the term executive function to describe this constellation of cognitive controls. The dynamics of executive function affect every one of us — young and old, as well as those with and without disabilities. It influences our performance at school, on the job, our emotional responses, personal relationships, and social skills. Yet executive function plays itself out a little differently in each of us; each individual is uniquely strong or competent in some cognitive control areas and weaker in others.
Executive function is a theory developed over the past 20 years. Interest in the theory — and discussion of it — is on the upswing among professionals who treat people with cognitive disabilities, including those with learning disabilities (LD), and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (AD/HD).
The theory of executive function is not an exact science, nor is it a standard diagnostic category. Even so, it can provide a framework in which parents and professionals can understand a child's level of cognitive ability. When a child struggles with learning, attention, or behavior problems, the concept of executive function can help us sort through and pinpoint where the breakdowns occur in the context of her overall functioning. It may also help highlight a child's areas of strength and talent. Finally, it may help us determine how to support the child's growth and development in areas of struggle.
How do experts define executive function?
While definitions of executive function vary slightly, and the concept is still evolving, there is some consensus among researchers, psychologists, and other experts. Sheldon H. Horowitz, Ed.D, director of professional services at the National Center for Learning Disabilities (NCLD), offers a description that reflects the views of many experts: "Executive functioning involves activating, orchestrating, monitoring, evaluating, and adapting different strategies to accomplish different tasks.... It requires the ability to analyze situations, plan and take action, focus and maintain attention, and adjust actions as needed to get the job done." Executive function is often compared to the conductor of a symphony orchestra, coordinating and managing many cognitive functions. For kids with LD and/or AD/HD, the interaction of cognitive functions may not always produce a harmonious result.
What abilities are involved in executive function?
Thomas Brown, Ph.D., assistant clinical professor of psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine and associate director of the Yale Clinic for Attention and Related Disorders, has proposed a model that includes six clusters of cognitive functions involved in executive function. The following table illustrates Dr. Brown's model (terms used by other experts are shown in italics).
 

Cognitive cluster
Executive functions
Activation
Organizing, prioritizing, and activating to workInitiating, planning, strategizing, and sequencing
Focus
Focusing, sustaining, and shifting attention to tasks
Effort
Regulating alertness, sustaining, and processing speedPacing, managing time, and resisting distraction
 
Emotion
Managing frustration and regulating emotions
Memory
Utilizing working memory and accessing recallUsing feedback
Action
Monitoring and self-regulating actionInhibiting

"Each cluster operates in rapidly shifting interactive dynamics to do a wide variety of daily tasks that require self-regulation by using attention and memory to guide one's action rather than being micro-managed by someone else," explains Dr. Brown.
How does executive functioning work (or not work) in kids with learning or attention problems?
To better understand how various executive functions play out in a child's daily life, let's examine some common childhood tasks and situations. The tables below list some of the executive functions required in specific situations* — and what difficulties result when the necessary executive functions are dysfunctional.

Reading comprehension
Executive function used
Signs of executive dysfunction
Working memory and accessing recall
When she reaches the end of a chapter, she's forgotten key points she picked up (and understood) while reading.
Regulating alertness
When reading a long passage, she can't stay alert and attentive; she has low stamina when it comes to reading.

Regulating processing speed
She reads in fits and starts; she can't find a rhythm in her reading pattern.



Writing
Executive function used
Signs of executive dysfunction
Activating (starting)
She doesn't know how to begin a writing project.
Organizing
She has no idea how to outline an essay or report.
Prioritizing
She writes too much about things that are of minor importance to the story.
Sequencing
She presents facts/ideas in a disorganized, illogical order.



Taking tests
Executive function used
Signs of executive dysfunction
Focusing
She is easily distracted and can't stay focused on the instructions or the test questions.
Strategizing
She can't develop an appropriate plan of attack by skimming the test and instructions before taking the test..
Working memory/ accessing recall
When trying to answer test questions, she has trouble remembering information she's previously learned. She struggles to hold onto and mentally manipulate related facts/concepts to answer test questions.
Pacing
She spends too much time on some questions and rushes through others. She may not efficiently budget the time that's allocated.



Long-term projects
Executive function used
Signs of executive dysfunction 
Organizing
She can't determine the steps for the project (or their sequence). She has trouble collecting resources and often misplaces what she does find. She struggles to put the pieces of the project together in an orderly or logical way.
Managing time
She doesn't set realistic task milestones to work through the project from start to finish.
Self-regulation
She fails to monitor her progress.



Shifting between tasks
Executive function used
Signs of executive dysfunction
Shifting attention
She can't "let go" of a task to attend to another project when instructed to. She gets "stuck" on a task or favorite pastime and can't move her focus elsewhere when required.
Managing frustration
She becomes angry or frustrated when she feels forced to switch gears.



Playing a game with a group of her peers
Executive function used
Signs of executive dysfunction
Self-regulation
She has a hard time waiting her turn and working cooperatively.
Managing frustration
When frustrated with her peers, she may act out before trying to understand and manage the perceived conflict internally and/or through calm communication.

* Note: The scenarios described above are examples but do not represent a complete list.
Are there tests that measure a child's strength and weakness in executive function?
There is some debate about this, but Dr. Brown states: "A person's ability to perform the complex, self-managed tasks of everyday life provides a much better measure of his or her executive functioning than can neuropsychological tests."
There is also a debate about whether or not an individual's executive function profile can be used, in and of itself, to help identify LD or diagnose AD/HD. It is not standard practice at this time.
How can you use the executive function framework to understand your child's strengths and struggles?
As a parent, you may find the framework of executive function helpful for identifying not only your child's area(s) of difficulty but also her strengths and talents. By organizing and teasing apart that information, her unique "executive function profile" may emerge. This will help you determine where she needs extra help, and where her strengths might help compensate for her areas of struggle.
This perspective may also help you communicate your concerns and observations to teachers and other professionals. This may, in turn, help educators determine what accommodations or interventions might target her areas of difficulty, perhaps by playing to some of her strengths. (Note: Many teachers are not familiar with the concept of executive function. However, your school psychologists may be familiar with the theory because neuropsychological testing is used to assess executive function.)
Whether or not your child meets the criteria for LD or AD/HD, understanding her executive function profile — where she struggles, where she succeeds, and how those abilities interact — may be a powerful tool for understanding who she is, and how she learns and functions best. Depending on the age of your child, it may also provide a lens through which she can view herself — a view that will change and develop as she matures.

Kristin Stanberry is a writer and editor specializing in parenting, education, and consumer health/wellness issues. Her areas of expertise include learning disabilities and AD/HD, which she wrote about extensively for Schwab Learning and GreatSchools.