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Naturalistic Interventions: Implementing in Real Life.

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Presentation on theme: "Naturalistic Interventions: Implementing in Real Life."— Presentation transcript:

1 Naturalistic Interventions: Implementing in Real Life

2 A Personal Connection

3 What’s the difference? Naturalistic Behavioral Interventions vs Developmental Social- Pragmatic Approaches

4 Naturalistic Behavioral Interventions Core assumptions: Voluntary behaviors are learned Behaviors are developed and maintained Antecedents Consequences Prompting, chaining, fading

5 Naturalistic Behavioral Interventions Because of concerns with generalization, naturalistic practices have emerged: Incidental teaching Mand-model Time delay Milieu teaching Interrupted behavior chains Pivotal response training (PRT)

6 Developmental Social-Pragmatic Interventions Core assumptions: Social-communication skills learned in a similar developmental sequence by all children Children learn through interactions with responsive caregivers Follow the child’s lead, respond to all communicative attempts, emotional affect is shared, adjust language and social input

7 DIR/Floortime Denver Model Responsive Teaching Hanen SCERTS Developmental Social-Pragmatic Interventions

8 Ingersoll, 2010

9 NPDC: Naturalistic Interventions A collection of practices, including: Environmental arrangement Interaction techniques Strategies based on the principles of Applied Behavior Analysis Designed to encourage specific target behaviors based on interests by building on skills that are naturally reinforcing and appropriate.

10 NPDC: Naturalistic Interventions In the context of daily routines throughout the day

11 Name some routines!

12 Step 1: Identify a target act Prelinguistic communication Linguistic communication Social skills

13 General Goal vs. Target Act General Goal: Connor will increase his use of language during play. Target Act: Connor will use the pronouns he, she, and it correctly We’re going to pull the target act out!

14 Step 2: Collecting Baseline Data: What’s happening now?

15 Step 3: Training Team Members  Identify the team: Who will teach the skill?  Provide adequate training to team members. (http://autismpdc.fpg.unc.edu/content/parent-implemented-intervention)

16 Step 4: Identifying Contexts for Intervention Learner-directed activities  Free choice time Routine activities  Snack time  Daily jobs Planned activities  Lesson plans: Science experiment example Choice making should be built into all activities!

17 Step 5: Arranging the Environment to Elicit the Target Act Motivating materials Keeper of the goods Arrange the context to Encourage use of target act Maintain interest

18 Video: Keeper of the Goods

19 Step 6: Eliciting the Target Act Provide both (6A)the foundation of the interaction, AND (6B)the specifics on how the communicative partner interacts with the learner

20 Use principles of ABA to elicit the target act. Language- rich, learner- directed, reciprocal interaction Use principles of ABA to elicit target act

21 Step 6A: Engaging the learner in an interaction  Follow the learner’s lead  Be at the learner’s level  Respond to verbal and nonverbal initiations  Provide meaningful verbal feedback  Expand on the learner’s utterances

22 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CjCHG7qvYEc Video: Language-rich, learner-directed, reciprocal interaction

23 Step 6B: Using strategies derived from ABA to elicit target acts  Modeling  Mand-modeling  Modified time delay  Incidental teaching

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25 Video: Modeling

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27 Video: Mand-Modeling

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30 Video: Incidental Teaching

31 Step 7: Use data collection to monitor progress and determine next steps

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33 Case Study: Marco

34 Case Study: Aidan Aidan’s activity matrix: 1. Review at tables 2. Discuss: Pros of writing out a plan like this How is this similar to things you already do? What stands out as being very different? What parts of this type of plan might be useful in your work?

35 Team work Complete an activity matrix for one of your target students, designed to elicit a target act from one of your priority goals. Include at least three school routines, and at least one routine from home or the community.


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