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Utilizing Applied Behavior Analysis

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Title: Utilizing Applied Behavior Analysis


1
Utilizing Applied Behavior Analysis
An ABA School Center for Children with
Autism Presented by Joshua Weinstein, President
Founder
2
Shema Kolainu- Hear Our VoicesMission Statement
  • To hear the voices of the children and families
    we serve as they strive to achieve their full
    potential for independence, productivity and
    inclusion in the community.
  • Shema Kolainu (SK) is dedicated to the education
    of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD).
  • Our vision is to provide the best opportunity
    offered anywhere for children with ASD to achieve
    recovery.

3
Shema Kolainu- Hear Our Voices
  • Shema Kolainu Hear Our Voices is a school and
    center for families with children with an autism
    spectrum disorder, and other related disabilities
    such as RETTS, OCD, ED and other physical
    disabilities.
  • Shema Kolainu is a private, non-profit,
    non-denominational, multi-cultural school,
    founded in 1998.

4
Shema Kolainu- Hear Our Voices
  • Center-based Services
  • Pre-School (3 to 5 years) - NYS approved
  • School (5 to 11 years) - NYS approvedRelated
    Services (center and home-based)
  • Speech Therapy
  • Occupational Therapy
  • Physical Therapy
  • Art Therapy
  • Music Therapy
  • Evaluation Services
  • Parent training and support groups

5
  • Technological Devices to
  • supplement verbal
  • behavior program
  • Augmentative Communication Devices
  • Computer software and programs
  • SK presented AAC Research in ABA 2006. Research
    resulted in increase
  • communication across all students. Research
    available on our website.

6
Home-Based Programs (part 1 EI)
  • Early Intervention Program Giving Toddlers A
  • Strong Start
  • The Early Intervention Program serves children
    diagnosed with autism and developmental
    disabilities, age 0-3 at the time of referral.
  • This program is based on a strong
    parent-professional partnership.
  • Individualized services focus on learning
    readiness language play family participation
    daily routines relevant to eating, sleeping, and
    bathing and other areas jointly identified by
    SK-HOV professionals and parents.

7
Home-Based Programs (part 2 EI)
  • Through EI, children with developmental delays
    and autism receive education, therapeutic,
    service coordination and evaluation in the five
    boroughs of New York City.
  • Programs are based on the child's Individualized
    Family Service Plan (IFSP) and are designed to
    involve the family in all aspects of the child's
    program. Intensive applied behavior analysis is
    the instructional method.

8
Home Based Programs (part 3 SEIT)
  • Special Education Itinerant Teacher (SEIT)
  • Program for Children ages 3-5
  • SEIT is an individualized program operating
    throughout the five boroughs of New York City
    that utilizes the child's natural environment for
    learning.
  • Certified special education teachers provide home
    and community-based, one-to-one individualized
    educational programming for preschool children,
    ages 3 to 5, with autism spectrum disorders and
    other developmental disabilities.

9
Home Based Programs (part 4 SEIT)
  • Home-based SEIT programming is often combined
    with the student's school, center-based or day
    program to encourage the generalization of
    skills. Some children with autism in SK-HOV's
    early intervention and preschool programs have
    made such dramatic progress that it is possible
    for them to attend their neighborhood nursery
    school with the assistance of a Special Education
    Itinerant Teacher.
  • Least Restricted Environment (LRE) is provided
    using these services for children who are able to
    be mainstreamed with support.
  • For students who can be mainstreamed, the SEIT
    provides behavioral interventions and support to
    the student at the nursery school while acting as
    a consultant to early childhood teachers.

10
RELATED COMMUNITY-BASED SERVICES/RES HAB
  • Shema Kolainu participates in OMRDD's Medicaid
    Service Coordination and Home Community-Based
    Services (HCBS) Waiver Program, providing Res Hab
    services through the waiver. A Service
    Coordinator is on-site to assist children and
    families.
  • Medicaid Waiver Services
  • Care at Home for the medically fragile
  • Medicaid Service Coordination (MSC)- coordinating
    the services that a child receives and ensuring
    it is effective and productive
  • Residential Habilitation Program (Res Hab)
    assisting with adaptive daily living skills in
    the home of the child

11
Parent Training Program (part 1)
  • Workshop Series
  • The workshop series is open the community free of
    charge. Lectures are presented every other month
    to address different topics that are related to
    ASD.
  • This years workshop include
  • Living with Autism
  • Positive approaches for children with ASD
  • The independent Learner
  • Language acquisition
  • Open Door Policy
  • Our classrooms are equipped with double sided
    mirrors that allow for uninterrupted observations
    with sound. This equipment can be used for both
    parent and staff training

12
Parent Training Program (part 2)
  • Parent support Group
  • Giving opportunities for parents to share their
    experiences and knowledge while developing
    relationships.
  • Networking
  • Community Resources
  • Resource library at school
  • Internet sites for parents

13
Staff Training Protocol (part 1)
  • ABA training manual-in the first two weeks of
    training the staff is given a manual that
    includes the basic literature, tactical decision
    list and decision protocol outline. This
    information is reviewed with a BCBA qualified
    personnel.
  • Observations are conducted using a detailed form
    called the Teacher Performance Rate and Accuracy
    (TPRA) form. These observation are analyzed and
    graphed by the supervisor and analyzed for
    mastery level criterion.
  • Public posting is an accepted behavioral tactic
    to ensure consistency of performance across time.

14
Staff Training Protocol (part 2)
  • Ongoing training is provided through
  • Staff Meetings
  • Weekly workshops
  • Rapid Data presentation
  • Personalized System of Instruction (PSI) and
    Principles of behavior for teaching programs.
  • Classroom meetings
  • Tactical decisions
  • Student performance
  • Quality Assurance (QA) meetings

15
PSI- Personalized System of Instruction
  • Modules (Keller, 1968, Greer, 2002)
  • Verbal behavior about the Science- vocabulary of
    the science of verbal behavior (positive
    reinforcement)
  • Contingency-Shaped Behavior- Operant behavior
    shaped directly by consequences (providing
    positive reinforcement)
  • Verbally-Mediated Behavior- behavior that is
    mediated or controlled by verbal behavior rather
    then contingencies (explaining positive
    reinforcement)

16
Teacher Assistant Rank

17
Classroom Teacher Rank
  • MODULE VERBAL BEHAVIOR
  • Partington, J. Sundberg, M. (1998). Teaching
    language to children with autism or other
    developmental disabilities. Pleasant Hill, CA
    Behavior Analysts, Inc.Ch. 1-5
  • DEMONSTRATION- Identify a student, administer a
    baseline assessment of skills using the ABLLS,
    identify target behaviors to be taught, script
    out all selected programs, document data
    collection, criteria, and ratio of instructional
    trials to criterion.
  • BCBA Signature______________________ Date
    Completed ________
  • Read Teaching operations for verbal behavior
    Teaching procedures for mands/tacts
  • Ch. 1 Basic sequence. (Greer, 2001)
  • Quiz to Criterion (90)
  • DEMONSTRATION- Implement direct mand training
    procedures outlined in Greer across 3 students- 5
    new forms taught to criterion in the 11 setting
    for each student.
  • Measurement- 3 consecutive TPRA observations per
    student without error
  • Measurement- mand training sessions conducted 3x
    per week per student, graphed and reviewed by
    supervising behavior analyst.
  • BCBA Signature______________________ Date
    Completed _________

18
TPRA- Teacher Performance Rate/Accuracy
  • Components of a TPRA (Ingham Greer, 1992)
  • The Learn Unit (Albers Greer, 1991)
  • (discrete trial Lovaas)
  • Mands and Reinforcement schedules (Mands are
    requests made for reinforcement. Reinforcement
    schedules indicate the frequency to access those
    reinforcers)
  • Rate of delivery how quickly the teacher
    delivers instruction
  • Collateral Praise a general reinforcement for
    the classroom
  • Immediate feedback

19
TPRA Form
  • Teacher Performance Rate and Accuracy Observation
  • Observer _____________ Student
    ________________ Reinforcers ____________
  • Teacher _____________ Program
    _______________ Mand Level ____________
  • Date ________________ STO __________________ RF
    . Sch ________________
  •  

Target Behavior Collateral Behaviors
LU Ant. Beh. Con. LU Mand Con. LU
Soc. I Soc. G Comments
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
20
Teacher Performance Rate/Accuracy
This graph shows an ascending trend of accurate
teacher delivered instruction over time.
21
Collateral Behaviors
  • What behaviors are recorded
  • Social praise to the student in the 11 setting
  • Social praise to others students in the classroom
  • Some of the Research
  • Jones, K. M. Drew, H. A. Weber, N. L. (2000).
    Noncontingent peer attention as treatment for
    disruptive classroom behavior.. Journal of
    Applied Behavior Analysis,. 33, 343-346.
  • Craft, M. A. Alber, S. R. Heward, W. L.
    (1998). Teaching elementary students with
    developmental disabilities to recruit teacher
    attention in a general education classroom
    Effects on teacher praise and academic
    productivity.
  • Paige M. McKerchar Rachel H. Thompson (2004).
    A descriptive analysis of potential reinforcement
    contingencies in the preschool classroom..
    Journal of Applied Behavior Analysis,. 37,
    431-444.

22
Collateral Behavior
This graph shows an ascending trend of collateral
reinforcement over time delivered by the teacher
to her student and all the other students in the
class.
23
Supervision Model
  • SKHOV strives for professionalism in its highest
    form
  • Our model includes a multilayered supervision
    team that is well qualified and experienced.
  • Every childs Portfolio is reviewed daily during
    the one and a half hour time interval that is set
    for portfolio planning and review.
  • Weekly portfolio review is done by a supervisor
    who is BCBA qualified.
  • A monthly review is completed by the educational
    director of all portfolios.
  • The ABLLS assessment is completed every three
    months to ensure progress.

24
Summary of SK ABA approach
  • ABLLS-R (Assessment of Basic Language and
    Learning Skills Revised) James Partington
  • Research and Evidence Based Practices
  • Individualized Instruction
  • Group and Peer Instruction
  • PSI Personalized System of Instruction
  • Related Services Speech, OT, PT, Art and Music
  • Parent Training
  • Staff Training and Module System
  • TPRA- Teacher Performance Rate/Accuracy
  • Collateral Behaviors (Reinforcement for other
    behaviors)
  • Supervision Model

25
Autism Awareness and Graduation Day
26
SK Visitors
  • Provides Autism awareness of our program

27
iCARE4autismInternational Center for Autism
Research Education
Founded with the goal of discovering a cure for
autism, iCARE seeks to build a consensus
surrounding the issues and best practices in
autism research and diagnosis.
28
iCARE4autismInternational Center for Autism
Research Education
  • Through RESEARCH, EDUCATION, AWARENESS, and
    FUNDING, iCARE4autism works in partnership with
    similar institutions globally to discover the
    etiology of autism, and to search for the
    biologic and environmental causes of autism
    spectrum disorders (ASD).

29
iCARE4autism International Autism Conference -
Jerusalem
Save the date! February 17,18,19, 2010 The Autism
Epidemic
Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) Across the Life
Span What Does Medical and Educational Research
Tell Us?
The gathering place for furthering autism
research education
30
  • What is the 2010 Autism Conference?
  • A 3-day international conference in Jerusalem,
    Israel.
  • Over 3,000 in attendance, including researchers,
    educators, parents, trade show vendors, and
    sponsors.
  • A gathering place for leading international
    autism researchers and educators to work in
    collaboration.
  • A meeting place for leading medical researchers
    and practitioners.
  • Leading behaviorists and educators meet to
    converse about the latest autism education.
  • The one place where parents can gain a complete
    overview of both the latest medical research and
    educational practices.
  • A unique opportunity for sponsors and vendors to
  • reach this valuable audience in a very
    brand-friendly environment.

31
Topics
  • Autism across the lifespan toddler, school-age,
    adult
  • Medical research in new neurobiology, genetics,
    and psychopharmacology
  • Education research in socialization,
    communication, challenging behavior, and other
    related areas.
  • Techniques covered ABA alternative treatments

32
Speakers Presenters
  • Over 30 countries represented
  • Medical and scientific researchers, Principal
    investigators
  • Professors
  • Board Certified Behavior Analysts
  • Pediatricians, Neurologists, Psychologists,
    Psychiatrists, Nurse Practitioners
  • Educational researchers
  • Parent Advocates

33
Location
  • Israel Convention Center (ICC)
  • Ussishkin Auditorium is Israel's largest
    auditorium. With 3,104 comfortable seats
  • Over 25 other halls with capacity ranging from
    2,000 to 180 seats

34
Dates Topics
February 17-19 Autism Awareness Week
  • Wednesday, Feb. 17 at ICC
  • Opening Ceremony
  • Featuring a Keynote address by President of
    Israel, Mayor of Jerusalem, and other major world
    leaders
  • Medical Research and Practice Presentations
  • Thursday, Feb. 18 at ICC
  • Educational Research and Practice Presentations
  • Friday, Feb. 19 (1/2 day) at ICC
  • Children and family activities
  • International Autism Awareness Week

35
Tradeshow and Exhibitions will include
  • Technological
  • Pharmaceutical
  • Educational
  • Therapeutic
  • Publication
  • Examples of booth exhibitors
  • Adaptive Communication Devices
  • Adaptive Equipment
  • Software and computer programs for children with
    autism
  • Therapeutic Services
  • Special Toys for Children
  • Holistic Therapy Exhibits

36
Thank you for your attention!
  • Questions?
  • Email to jweinstein_at_skhov.org
  • Additional resources
  • www.icare4autism.org
  • www.shemakolainu.org
  • www.abainternational.org
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