Publication Date:August 22, 2007 Availability:Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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ISBN13: 9781890627416
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Condition: New
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Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed
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 forever 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 the 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.
Customer Reviews:
Good choiceJanuary 7, 2010 Jason M. Fournerat(Grapevine Tx) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I think this will be a very helpful resource. I have found great tips that helped with potty training and will tackle the other stuff once that is established.
Self Help Skills for People with AutismJanuary 7, 2010 Kathryn Kellas(Seaford, VA 23696) 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
Being a professional in the behavioral business with individuals on the autism spectrum, I thought this book was very good when it came to giving ideas and showing how to create task analysis programming situations. However, I bought this book hoping I would get a detailed list of ALL the skills that needed to be taught for specific items. For example, I wanted to see some self-help skills checklists that I could use as examples when I'm training new therapists/parents. How does a new person in training learn anything without the basics? Kathryn Raulerson-Kellas, Founder [...]
BEST Book on Self-Help SkillsFebruary 23, 2008 Mary L. Barbera 17 out of 19 found this review helpful
This book is clearly written and behaviorally accurate. It will be helpful to both parents and professionals who need to improve their own techniques so the children and adults they work with can become independent with self-help skills. As a Board Certified Behavior Analyst, an author, and a mother of an 11-year-old son with autism, I am recommending this book to everyone!
Mary Lynch Barbera, RN, MSN, BCBA
[[ASIN:1843108526 The Verbal Behavior Approach: How to Teach Children With Autism and Related Disorders]]