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Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Evidence-Based Practice for Social Skills {1000 Likes Celebration Day 3}

Continuing on with the celebration for 1000 likes, I asked Abby to talk about some strategies for social skills and pragmatics.  This is an awesome post with lots of evidence-based practice ideas!! So here we go with Day 3- take it away, Abby! 

Yesterday's winner-Breana O.  Congrats!  You will be emailed by the end of the week! 



Hi! I'm Abby and I am the author of Schoolhouse Talk! I was thrilled when Carissa reached out to me and asked if I would help her celebrate reaching 1000 'likes' on her facebook page. What an awesome milestone Carissa - congratulations! Today I will be sharing a brief overview of some strategies for training social skills.

Social Skills are defined as socially acceptable learned behaviors. These skills are important because they bring about positive responses from others when we interact. Many children want to form meaningful relationships but may not have the skills to do so. A lack of such skills can result in anxiety and social isolation, poor academics, substance abuse, and even suicide in extreme cases. Social skills are not just for students with autism spectrum disorder, and should be taught in every environment a child enters.
The students we work with can have difficulty in skill acquisition (i.e. learning the skills they don't have) as well as skill performance (using the trained skills they have). When training skill acquisition, the best instruction stays within the zone of proximal development (ZPD). The ZPD is the range of skills between what a child is able to do independently, and the skills the child can do with support.


SOCIAL NARRATIVES:
Social narratives is a strategy for teaching specific social skills or concepts by presenting the skill in the form of a story. Social narratives are perfect for serving as a primer, which helps make a child aware of a skill, transition, new activity, or routine. Social narratives are often written by breaking a task down into smaller steps. Narratives should be written so the child wants to read them, should be written at the same level a child is reading at or able to understand, and should use flexible terms such as "may" or "might" instead of more rigid terms such as "must" or "will". Carol Gray has many examples of well-written Social Stories on her website.

We can combine social narratives with behavioral rehearsal, or role-playing, for maximum effectiveness. When incorporating role-playing into training, we are then able to target both "thinking" about a skill and "doing" the skill.

If you'd like to learn more, this website does a nice job explaining social narratives, and also provides links to additional resources.
PROMPTING:
Prompts are support and assistance that is provided to help a student experience success. Prompts can take many forms, such as physical touch, modeling, verbal prompts, gestural prompts, or natural prompts. An example of a natural prompt is someone saying, "Hello." When working with your students, you want to use the least supportive prompt necessary in order to ensure success. Remember, students need to be attending to a situation in order to perform the appropriate or expected response. So many times, students' attention should be prompted prior to prompting their behavior. That prompt for attention may be all the student needs to refocus and perform the desired behavior. Fade your prompts as quickly as possible once a student is responding. An easy way to fade prompts is to pair a more supportive prompt with a less supportive prompt, then fade away the more supportive prompt.
PEER MENTORS:
Peer mentors are another great way to help train social skills in a more natural set-up than child/therapist interactions can provide. Basically, peer mentors are trained to appropriately initiate and respond to their peer. Now the adult therapist can facilitate the play, but is not directly part of the interactions, resulting in significantly reduced prompts to the student! Peer mentors should be a similar age to the student, should demonstrate adequate social skills, and should also have a history of getting along well with your student. I think this is such a great way to train social skills! When I go to a classroom to pull students, there are always some peers who beg me to take them too. Now I have a good excuse to agree! Remember to get parent permission before selecting peer mentors to train. Another good idea is to choose a couple "generalization peers" to see how trained skills and interactions transfer to other 'novel' children. This publication from the Vanderbilt-Minnesota Social Interaction Project is an excellent explanation of incorporating social skills training and peer mentors in the classroom. Are any of you using peer mentors in your practice?
VIDEO MODELING & VIDEO SELF-MODELING
Video modeling is a highly effective strategy for students with autism due to the strength of visual cues vs. auditory cues for these students. Students are shown short videos which demonstrate appropriate and successful target behaviors. Much like athletic teams have been studying videos, this technique is now moving into the classroom! These videos should be positive and focus on success, and should be 1-2 minutes in length so your students can retain the information in memory.
When using video self-modeling, your students are the stars! You can record your student participating in social interactions. You can even provide prompts and instructions to the student while recording, but then edit those prompts out before showing the video to your student. That way, the final cut that your student watches shows him or her performing a desired behavior successfully. How powerful for a student to see! Remember, keep the videos positive and focus on performing behaviors successfully!


So that's it - four effective evidence-based techniques for introducing social skills and training behaviors! Thank you so much for allowing me to share on Home Sweet Speech Room today! Congratulations on 1000 Facebook 'likes' - WOW! (Schoolhouse Talk is also on facebook, twitter, and instagram!)

Thanks so much, Abby!  Hope you all learned a lot from this post and that it will be helpful to you!! 


Today, I also have TWO great giveaways for you- One from If Only I Had Super Powers and another from Let's Talk Speech Therapy.

CC from If Only I Had Super Powers generously donated her new Space Hero Social Skills unit for one lucky reader to win!  It looks awesome!! Check it out here for more pictures and info.  Enter the rafflecopter below for a chance to win!



a Rafflecopter giveaway

Rachel at Let's Talk Speech Therapy is giving away one copy of Building Conversation to a lucky reader!! It's simply adorable.  Check out more pictures and info here and enter the rafflecopter below for a chance to win!



a Rafflecopter giveaway


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17 comments:

  1. I don't have any fluency cases currently. I like the Easy Does It book from Linguisystems.

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    1. Whoops sorry- that question was for tomorrow. Not sure how it made its way onto the one for today. But I'll still count your entry :)

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  2. I don't have any fluency clients at this time!

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    Replies
    1. Whoops sorry- that question was for tomorrow. Not sure how it made its way onto the one for today. But I'll still count your entry :)

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  3. I love using role playing activities with my students! We can act out a situation and they are better equipped to handle it when they encounter it in real life.

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  4. I am a huge fan of using social thinking materials to target the underlying issue of attention/orientation as well as providing motivation and reason to use the social skills being taught. I have found that the students begin to understand why face/eye contact is important and begin to use it. They will also engage others in topics of conversation that aren't within their interests. Video modeling and self-video modeling has been a fantastic teaching tool to use. My students have made a lot of progress!

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  5. I like to use social stories but the other strategies are also very helpful depending on the clients

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  6. I use many Social Thinking Strategies, including expected vs. Unexpected, eyes do our thinking, etc. Video modeling is great too!

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  7. Peer modeling is most effective strategy for many of my students.

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  8. I was recently taught The Zones of Regulation. I like it for many students. It is not the only thing I use but it is useful for recognizing different emotions and talking about the size of problems.

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  9. I like using real life situations to work on social skills with peer involvement! :)

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  10. I love video modeling, but finding the time to record, edit and playback has been a challenge.

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  11. I use social stories and video modeling.

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  12. I use social stories and peer modeling in real life situations.

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  13. I like to use Social stories and Social Thinking activities.

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  14. I use social stories, peer modeling, and hope to start using video

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  15. I've been trying to use Social Thinking activities.

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