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Published byCamron Atkins Modified over 8 years ago
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1 Joint Action Routines Ways to make interactions predictable, logical and meaningful
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2 Family is the first and most fundamental relationship Core problems….Greenspan Caregiver behaviors are predictive of language and joint attention skills development
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3 Children with ASD Trouble gaining meaning from what we say and do in interactions Predictable and logical interactions increase child’s ability to participate and communicate
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4 Elements of JARs Unifying theme Joint focus Specific roles Logical predictable sequence Repeatable over time Planned variation
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5 Unifying theme or purpose Child must understand what the activity is all about and must want to be involved 1. Preparation or assembly of a project or product 2. Cooperative turn-taking games or routines 3. Routines organized around a story or plot
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6 Joint focus and interaction Participants attend to same event and respond accordingly Interaction is required in order to increase opportunities for practice of language and social responses
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7 Logical sequence of events and structure for turn taking A logical sequence of events makes the routine predictable and repeatable Initially the sequence of events should be kept exactly the same until the child knows the routine very well…same words and phrases Break sequence into very small steps (each step signals a communication opportunity)
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8 Clearly defined roles Initial routines should be simple and each participant should maintain their role… one is always the requester, the other, the giver More complex routines allow child to play different roles within the activity and to learn the give and take nature of interaction
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9 Planned repetition and variation It is important for child to anticipate what to say or do. This is accomplished through repetition Exact words and actions are needed until child is able to use those words and actions independently
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10 Repetition and variation (continued) With some children exact repetition is not critical. The adult may simply reduce the choices of what to say, modeling several variations When the child can independently use his role in the routine, it is time to vary the routine
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11 Controlled variation Variation of a routine is critical if there is to be expansion of language and behavior Introduce new materials, new vocabulary Omit needed materials Do the unexpected Sabotage by making objects inaccessible; use objects that don’t work or are inappropriate; interrupt or violate a routine
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12 Remember! Make JARs age appropriate Consider each child’s abilities Include the child’s interests in the routine Know what the goals are Individualize
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13 Goals Language goals (gestures, words, repairs, initiation, responding, conversational turns) Motor goals Social goals (JA, sharing, turn taking) Cognitive goals (attending, problem solving) Behavioral goals (emotional regulation, persistence, expanded repertoires)
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