Education.com

Developing Social Skills Programming: Changing Barriers into Strategies and Tactics (page 3)

By Lee Stickle, M.S.|Jane Goetz, M.S.
Autism Society

Social Stories

Social Stories™ (Gray, 2000) have been a valuable tool for the students with whom we have worked. We have used Social Stories consistently as part of our long-term strategy to develop social competence. Our goal is to use this tactic as a preventative measure; Social Stories forces the interventionist to think ahead, to consider relevant social cues, and to take into account the perspective of people with ASD and help them understand the perspective of others.

Social Autopsies

We used social autopsies as a wrap-up to the events that we had primed using Social Stories. Frequently, we supported social autopsies with cartooning, because many of our students learned more quickly when we could incorporate a visual component into our lessons. A social autopsy is a tactic by which social interactions are analyzed, errors are identified, feedback is offered, plans for correction are discussed and practice is provided. By the same token, we need to analyze successful social interactions as well. Frequently we fail to acknowledge the successes, but by doing so, we can create a feeling of ability and success rather than feelings of disability and failure. Learning disabilities consultant Rick Lavoie says, “The success of the autopsy approach is linked to the fact that it provides the child with the three things that special-needs students require in order to develop and learn: (a) practice or drill, (b) immediate feedback and (c) positive reinforcement” (cited in Bieber, 1994).

Video Review

Video review has been an extremely effective tool for those students who enjoy watching television or video programs. We did not use this format with students who did not like television or videos. We used video review in a myriad of ways. Two examples follow:

1. We videotaped social settings (without the student in the setting) and conducted an autopsy of what we had seen, followed by a second viewing of the tape and a second autopsy. We tried to use this tactic when transitioning students into a new setting. It allowed them not only to hear about the expectations of the environment, but to actually see the environment.

2. One team recorded the TV show “Beverly Hills 90210” and then completed a social autopsy on a single scene. The purpose in doing so was two-fold; first, it gave the students someone else to critique, and second, it gave them something in common with the other students at school who had watched the show. Soon, quite a few typically developing students were requesting permission to join the class where the autopsy was performed. Developing shared interests was an unplanned benefit to the activity, but, it since has become an integral part of activity development.

View Full Article

Add your own comment

Ask a Question

Have questions about this article or topic? Ask
Ask
150 Characters allowed

Washington Virtual Academies

Tuition-free online school for Washington students.