Portland Public Library

Activity schedules for children with autism, teaching independent behavior, Lynn E. McClannahan & Patricia J. Krantz

Label
Activity schedules for children with autism, teaching independent behavior, Lynn E. McClannahan & Patricia J. Krantz
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [139]-142) and index
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Activity schedules for children with autism
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
551722208
Responsibility statement
Lynn E. McClannahan & Patricia J. Krantz
Series statement
Topics in autism
Sub title
teaching independent behavior
Summary
"A revolutionary teaching tool, an activity schedule is a set of pictures and/or words that cue children and adults to perform tasks, engage in activities, or enjoy rewards. For example, activity schedules can help a person do laundry, talk to a classmate, or play with toys. This new edition of the bestselling guide for families and professionals covers all the exciting successes and far-reaching impacts of using activity schedules--increased independence, social interaction, self-management--and provides the reader with step-by-step guidance for creating and implementing them"--Cover, p. 4
Table Of Contents
1. Independence, choice, and social interaction : Introduction ; Background ; What is an activity schedule? ; Independence ; Choice ; Social interaction ; We all use schedules ; About this book -- 2. Prerequisite skills: is my child ready for an activity schedule? : Introduction ; Identifying picture versus background ; Matching identical objects ; Picture-object correspondence skills ; Accepting manual guidance ; Using materials ; Summary -- 3. Preparing a first activity schedule : Selecting activities ; Taking pictures ; Preparing materials ; Identifying and preparing rewards ; Designing the environment ; Preparing to teach social interaction skills -- 4. A different way to teach : Why manual guidance? ; Preparing to teach ; The initial instruction ; Manual guidance ; Delivering rewards ; Some do's and don'ts ; Graduated guidance ; Spatial fading ; Shadowing ; Decreasing physical proximity ; Dealing with errors ; Putting it all together -- 5. Measuring schedule following : Introduction ; Collecting data ; Solving data-collection problems ; Graphing the data -- 6. The first schedule is mastered! : Introduction ; New activity sequences ; New pictures and activities ; New independence ; New problems, familiar solutions ; New schedules --7. When do activities end? : Introduction ; Using timers ; Other time-management skills ; Time-management skills and family life -- 8. Increasing choice : Introduction ; Teaching children to choose rewards ; Teaching children to sequence their own activities ; Teaching children to deliver their own rewards -- 9. From pictures to words : Introduction ; Introducing textual cues ; Reading skills and "to-do" lists ; Using appointment books ; Activity schedules in a high-tech world -- 10. Expanding social interaction skills : Introduction ; Social skills for nonverbal children ; Social skills for children who say a few words ; Building peer interaction skills ; Social skills for children who use phrases and sentences ; Fading auditory and textual cues -- 11. Activity schedules for adults : Activity schedules at home ; Activity schedules at work ; Activity schedules in community ; Activity schedules and task analysis -- 12. Activity schedules: a platform for progress : Activity schedules increase engagement ; Activity schedules decrease problem behavior ; Activity schedules help young people learn to learn ; Activity schedules foster independence ; Activity schedules promote skill generalization ; Activity schedules help young people use the same cues we use -- 13. Problem solving -- Appendices : A. Prerequisite skills data sheets (samples) ; B. Button-activated voice recorders ; C. Audio card readers ; D. Schedule following data sheets (samples)
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