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Pivotal Response Treatment: Identifying and Targeting Areas of Need in Children with ASD (page 3)

By Lynn Kern Koegel, Ph.D., CCC-SLP|Robert L. Koegel, Ph.D.
Autism Society

Social Initiations

Since that initial research, we’ve focused on finding other pivotal areas. We discovered another important pivotal area by retroactively looking at tapes of adolescents and adults with autism when they were in preschool. After many years of analyzing boxes full of tapes and looking at countless different behaviors, we found that preschoolers who initiated interactions with their parents had much better long-term outcomes than those who didn’t. That is, the children who exhibited lots of initiations made significantly more progress throughout their lives, often getting jobs and/or going to college, and along the way making friends, having sleepovers, talking on the phone, getting invited to birthday parties and play dates, and so on. In contrast, the children who had few or no initiations as preschoolers were more likely to later live in residential settings, have few or no friends, be unemployed, not attend college, and often be disruptive, aggressive or self-injurious. Following that discovery, we began a line of research designed to teach young children with autism various types of initiations. Our longitudinal data suggest that initiations can be taught, and once learned, can produce more positive long-term outcomes for children. Although this is a new line of research, we are optimistic that initiations can make a huge difference for individuals with autism, and thus appear to be pivotal.

Self-Management

Self-management is another pivotal area we’ve researched. There comes a time in everyone’s life when they have to take responsibility for themselves. For typical children, this may begin early on, and by the time adolescence comes around, kids are pretty independent. Unfortunately, many individuals on the spectrum remain dependent on their parents or care providers throughout the lifespan. Self-management procedures have been effective in creating independence and decreasing the need for constant adult vigilance. To implement self-management for young children, we can restructure the way that we provide consequences, simply by asking them how they think they did before giving them feedback. As individuals on the spectrum grow up, check lists can be developed. Selfmanagement procedures can be programmed for just about any behavior, from reducing repetitive behaviors in full-inclusion school settings, to hygiene, to improving socialization in community settings. Even for nonverbal individuals, self-management can be accomplished by using pictures. Again, self-management appears to be pivotal—when a person can manage his or her own behaviors, widespread improvements in other areas are evidenced.

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