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About the Author |
| Stephen R. Anderson is the Executive Director of Summit Educational Resources, which serves children and young adults with developmental disabilities. He is a licensed psychologist and Board Certified Behavior Analyst.
Amy L. Jablonski is a licensed psychologist and directs Summit's outreach and evaluation services including the diagnostic clinic.
Marcus L. Thomeer is a licensed psychologist and Director of Research and Evaluation at Summit. His responsibilities include Connections, a summer treatment program for children with Asperger's disorder.
Vicki Madaus Knapp is the Director of Summit's Early Autism Program and a Board Certified Behavior Analyst.
Visit the authors' website! |
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2008 IPPY Award: Bronze Medalist, Psychology/Mental Health
If you're the parent of a child with an autism spectrum disorder, ages 6 and under, please help us understand what kinds of introductory books are most needed by families ....Take our brief survey now.
Learning self-help skills--eating, dressing, toileting, and personal hygiene--can be challenging for people with autism, but is essential for independence. Self-Help Skills for People with Autism thoroughly describes a systematic approach that parents (and educators) can use to teach basic self-care to children, ages 24 months to early teens, and even older individuals. With an encouraging tone, the authors--behavior analysts and psychologists--emphasize that it's worthwhile to devote the extra time and effort now to teach skills rather than have your child be dependent on others.
The many case studies throughout Self-Help Skills depict individuals with deficits in specific self-care tasks, and demonstrate how a coordinated and systematic approach is effective in teaching more complex skills. For example, a 12-year-old with the self-feeding skills of a toddler, who was excluded from the school cafeteria, is taught to stay at the table to eat a full meal using utensils. The book's beginning chapters explain the teaching process in detail:
- Specify the target skill to be taught after prioritizing the self-care tasks that are most important and will likely have the greatest success rate
- Use task analysis to break complex skills into a series of small steps that will later be linked together to form the more complex skill
- Apply a systematic approach to instruction that consistently employs proven methods for teaching people with autism including verbal prompting, reinforcers/rewards, chaining, graduated guidance, shaping, modeling, visual supports, etc.
- Monitor progress by collecting and analyzing data
- Modify your approach as needed to achieve the target goal
A chapter is devoted to each of the four skill areas (eating, dressing, toileting, personal hygiene) offering detailed insight and specific instruction strategies. Appendices contain forms to complete for task analyses, instructional plans, and data collection. With the information in Self-Help Skills, parents can immediately start teaching their child, or refer back to the book to fine-tune skills as their child develops.
Pair this book with TIME TIMER and VOICE-OVER products that help children with autism be more productive and independent.
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