| "I
wondered if you had any info to share about the problem of "learned helplessness".
Do you have any info we can use to educate parents about it? Thanks for
all your help."MC
Answer: Kerry Hogan,
Psychoeducational Therapist, Chapel Hill TEACCH Center
In our eagerness to see students with autism succeed, we often end up
helping people so much that they become dependent upon our help. This
is a particular danger with students with autism because of their preference
for routine. Students will frequently avoid beginning an activity or will
constantly ask for help, not because they need help, but because this
has become part of a routine that they have a hard time changing. I worked
with a young man this summer who asked for help several times during his
independent work time because he was so accustomed to having someone stand
near him and help with any little difficulty, that he had not learned
how to be independent. This is why we emphasize the development of visual
systems that aren't dependent on another person. Visual systems such as
highlighting important information in a reading assignment, giving a youngster
a checklist to organize chores, or labeling shelves so that a student
knows where to put away toys will teach a student to look for helpful
cues in the environment, rather than looking for other people. The therapists
who work with adults at TEACCH always say that the clients who are most
successful in job situations are those who have learned how to use these
cues so they do not require constant supervision.
There are too many types of visual supports for me to mention in this
column but a number of useful resources are available for developing these
strategies including this web site. In addition there is information at
www.teacch.com and in several books
available through the Autism Society of North Carolina at www.autismsociety-nc.org.
Once you have chosen a visual system appropriate for your situation,
you must try to teach its use without becoming a part of another routine.
This can be achieved by minimizing the number of verbal cues you give,
and when the student needs help, redirecting them back to the visual system
you have created. For the youngster I mentioned above I did two things.
First, I made sure that the work I expected him to do independently was
work that he had truly mastered so that I knew he did not need my help.
This required changing some of his work to be simpler and more visually
clear. Then I gave him a sign for his desk that said, "Always try first.
When you are finished the teacher will check your work and help you with
anything that was too hard." When he started to ask for help, I would
point to the sign. In the week I was working with him he didn't fully
change his routine of asking for help. His ability to work independently
was, however, improving and I am confident that as his teachers continue
this strategy, he will become a more independent person. This is obviously
a strategy that would not be useful for a lower skilled or younger student.
However, picture cues or other nonverbal cues are equally effective in
teaching independence.
Here are a few more examples of how you might teach independence:
- If you are trying to help a student be more independent during transitions,
you may develop a schedule. When teaching that schedule, consistently
redirect the student to the schedule during a transition. This can be
done nonverbally by handing the student a card that matches the color
of his/her schedule, or for young student, handing them an object that
represents the next activity. For example, rather than saying, "Go to
snack," hand the student a cup.
- If a student is working on an independent assignment practicing reading
comprehension, and you have highlighted some passages to help with this
skill, point to the highlighted material when the student needs help
rather than actually telling him/her to look at the highlights.
- Some students have success with reminder cards as I used with the
student I described. For instance, a student working on a relaxation
strategy might have a card on the desk that says, "When you are upset,
close your eyes and count to 20." Or it may simply be a picture of a
person with eyes closed for student who are nonreaders. If you notice
that the student is upset but hasn't tried the counting technique, just
walk by and point to the card.
- Finally, remember to use some nonverbal techniques for students when
doing individual instruction. If you are teaching a skill that you expect
the student to use independently, try to make yourself a very unimportant
part of the instruction. Instead structure the activity and provide
enough visual cues that the student will be as independent as possible
right from the start. Then use your teaching time to remind the student
about the visual cues and help teach the student to use these cues effectively.
Each of these are examples, not only of using a visual system to
make a person more independent, but also of nonverbal ways to teach
the use of these systems. If your instruction is primarily nonverbal
and is focused on showing the student where the information is, rather
than providing the information yourself, the student will eventually
look to that information and you will be able to fade yourself from
the picture. The student will also develop more confidence that s/he
can do things alone and that help is available, even when you are
not.
I'm glad you asked this question. Working with people of all ages,
I see how important independence is for people with autism throughout
their lives and it's something we must be especially conscious of
in our teaching.
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