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Published byClara Worcester Modified over 10 years ago
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Using Visuals and Work Systems to add Structure to the Environment
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Structuring the teaching environment creates a visual environment that: Speaks to the person with ASD Supports the persons behavior Supports the persons independent learning
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Structured teaching is an approach to behavior management Structured teaching manages and manipulates the environment to promote better communication It teaches organizational skills It is based upon the communication level of the student It involves the physical structure of the environment Contains clearly delineated schedules Utilizes individual work systems with visually clear task orientation (Schopler, Mesibov, & Hearsey, 1995)
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Structuring the teaching adds predictability and consistency to: daily routines Workstation routines Transitions throughout the day Structuring the teaching environment creates a visual environment that: Helps the person with ASD understand Helps the person with ASD be calm When we understand our environment we are not so agitated Helps the person with ASD achieve independence Helps to develop skills Helps as a proactive approach to behavior management
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Physical structure Visual schedules Errorless learning activities
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Refers to the way we set up and organize the classroom The student with ASD needs to visually see what type of learning takes place in each area. Overall room organization Centers or work stations/systems One-to-one instruction area Small group instruction area Large group instruction area Clear physical & visual boundaries Furniture and room dividers Tape on floor Carpet squares Minimize visual & auditory distractions
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Workstation Arrangements 0 sided workstations 1 sided workstations 2 sided workstations 3 sided workstations 4 sided workstations
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Answer these questions for the person with ASD What work? How much work? When am I finished? What happens next?
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Arrangements within the workstations Left to right Top to bottom Workstation schedule Materials define the tasks Picture jigs Written instructions Products samples
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Individual schedules tell students Where they should be What activity they should be doing When they will be done with this activity What they will do next Types of visual schedules Transition object Single picture/photo Picture/word cards Written cards/written lists Formatting Stationary vs. portable Top to bottom Left to right
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TEACCHs work systems create a systematic way for students with ASD to receive and understand information Review of 4 key questions What do I do? How much do I do? How will I know I am finished? What do I do when I am finished?
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Physical arrangement in work station Left to right Top to bottom Defined finished area Typical work system activities: Matching (colors, numbers, letters, etc.) Sorting (functional items) Coallating (functional items) Teach concept of finished Teach concept of first ______, then _____
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Begin with skills he/she comes with Build the work with accomplished skills Look at skills to begin teaching in the 1 to 1 workstation
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Data Collection Form Name:Date: Observer:Classroom: Start time:Stop time: Mark your activities in which the child participated each day as V for verbal prompt, P for pointing/gesturing prompt, HoH for hand over hand prompt, or I for independent (no prompts). Workstation Activities Mon.Tues.Weds.Thurs.Fri.Comments
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Set a mastery target for each workstation activity (100% accuracy at an automatic level for 4 out of 5 consecutive days) Modify activity once master is met Generalize activity series to new settings Other workstations Natural environment
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As students shows mastery of 3 or more variations on current workstation activity transfer it to a new setting and replace with a new activity in the current setting Move from 1 to 1 to independent Move from independent to regular classroom Move from regular classroom to home setting Extend on them off current activities All sorting, matching, etc. Functional
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Workstations can and should occur in many of the following settings. Special education classrooms 1 to 1 workstations Independent workstations General education classrooms Other school settings In the home (bathroom, bedroom, kitchen, dining room, etc.) In the community (church, job, etc.)
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TEACCH Parent Logs 1. Keep them positive: Parents like to hear about their childs accomplishments and good traits; talk about things that delight you and make the child adorable. 2. Describe the full day: Give parents a brief run down of the full day, not just part of it. 3. Share one thing learned: Educate the parents. Include at least one thing learned about their child. Report constructive things that have potential for helping. The issue is not whether it is good or bad, but that it is reported positively and furthers knowledge about the child.
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TEACCH Parent Logs (Cont.) 4. Describe the difficulties: Talk about the childs problems and the difficulties presented in class. Parents know their child has problems; they tend to suffer more when protected by well meaning professionals who withhold information, than when they are treated as equals who can help solve problems. 5. Tell how you managed/taught: Parents want answers! Be sure to include descriptions of anything you find effective, as well as why it works. If you know parents concerns, definitely include information you have relative to their concerns.
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TEACCH Parent Logs (Cont.) 6. Send home material: If you develop visual devices that work, send them home along with the explanations of how they were used. Written descriptions are appreciated, but if parents dont have time to make materials, then they often remain written descriptions. Having devices in hand may help a parent become a parent-teacher. 7. Ask for feedback: Nothing helps the collaborative relationship more than having the educational experts genuinely ask parents (the REAL experts) for help. These parents can help you avoid things that have already been tried or obviously wont work.
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TEACCH Structured Teaching Model Parent Log Components: 1. Summarize the day 2. Educate about an area of difficulty 3. Describe it 4. Explain it 5. What did I do about it? 6. What worked? What didnt work? 7. Ask the questions at the end 8. Write in a positive, constructive way
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The workstation, particularly in conjunction with the individual schedule is a powerful intervention for people with ASD. Creates familiarity and predictability to a wide variety of activities Can build flexibility – activities change but the system remains the same Teaches the first... then... concept
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Workstation activities can be higher level – they need to merely be at the independent level for the person with ASD The key to structuring the environment is to: Create a physical structure with clearly defined boundaries that will facilitate independent, 1 to 1, small and large group learning Design individual daily schedules for your students with ASD Design learning activities that include errorless independent learning
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