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Developing Social Skills Programming: Changing Barriers into Strategies and Tactics (page 4)

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

Role Playing

Role playing was a tactic we used with students who had the ability to imitate and pretend. For students who had not yet developed those skills, we taught role playing, but did not use it as an instructional tool; rather, it alone was the outcome. For those with whom we used it as a tactic to develop social skills, we included it in the “instructional chain,” which usually consisted of a Social Story, scripting, role playing, application in the real world and social autopsy. However, we made modifications as needed since no one size fits all. Role playing is more than just scripting; it is scripting with emotion, action and movement. It is an opportunity to provide immediate feedback.

People Pages

Linda Hodgdon (1995) created this innovative tactic. A People Page includes a picture of a person and some facts about them, such as name, age and interests. The student with ASD uses these pages to learn about that person. A script can be developed that prompts the student with ASD to interact with the other person based upon his interests, rather than the interests of the person with ASD. We’ve used this tactic successfully with many students. Supports, such as People Pages, are not just effective for young children or people with learning differences; in fact, they are similar to what you might see if you were to log into an online dating services.

Hidden Curriculum

Brenda Smith Myles, chief of programs and development for OCALI, describes breaches of the hidden curriculum as those events that make us think, “I shouldn’t have to tell Michael not to …” However, for students with ASD, we do have to tell them. Moreover, we have to teach them. Two of the biggest mistakes we make in working with people with ASD are (1) we assume too much, and (2) we expect that they will bring to any given situation prior knowledge that they not only can access but also can apply. These mistakes can and often lead not only to social blunders, but, also social isolation. The hidden curriculum is where even the most well-educated, bright, socially trained person with ASD will exhibit his ASD. The hidden curriculum is the connective tissue; it is the part that allows everything else we teach to work together and provide stability to the social being.

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