Sunday, February 26, 2006

Good News on Academics

Parent/teacher conferences were last week. The good news is that when James's teachers were able to get him to cooperate on a few standardized tests, he scored higher than expected. Bad news is that they still spend more time with his behavior than any other kid in the classroom: he is the highest functioning kid in class but is also the most challenging because of his behavior. It has also been difficult for them to find coherent patterns in his behavior, so each day is a new surprise, and on some days, maybe every fifteen minutes.

James is currently in a "functional life skills unit," but his teachers have determined that it is below his ability level. They feel that a Social Behavioral Skills (SBS) program may be more appropriate for James than the SCORES (Social Communications something... something...) program that he is currently under. He also needs more time with inclusion in the general education environment. Next week or so I'll be visiting a new school that has an SBS program with inclusion support.

This is good news. Although James has his quirks, his teachers love working with him. He'll be missed. He has a good sense of humor and can be very endearing and affectionate at times, even though he scares some of the other kids. James's age-level is first grade, but he's repeating some kindergarten material because of non-participation and behavior/social problems last year. His curriculum will be readjusted to fit his needs. If they could only just get him to comply.

Here are my notes from the meeting:

---

Brigance Tests

  • Word recognition:
    2nd grade level. 9/10 words correct, 10th word correct on 2nd try (playing games).
    3rd grade level: didn't want to participate.

  • Oral:
    A, lower first [grade level], no errors
    A, upper first [grade level], didn't want to participate

  • Addition: up to 18 without grouping, but with manipulatives.
    Subtraction: some with help, beginning skills.

    A small digression: The math skills are recent. I remember chuckling at James's daily notes the first few weeks they tried to get him to do math. There were a lot of code "1"s annotated on his daily schedule for that block, which according to the legend, stands for "ran away." The grumpy professor I had for the first semester of Discrete Mathematics was so dry and uninspiring that I wanted to run away. James's teachers are much nicer, but I can still empathize with his situation.

Behaviors of Concern

  • Agression/Threatening.
  • General Non-compliance.
  • Targeting the defenseless.
  • Not responding consistently to positive or negative reinforcement.

Positive Behavior

  • Works well in general education with assistance.
  • Can express needs and wants functionally.
  • Enjoys jokes and humor.
  • Is flexible with transition and change.

Some Observations on Behavior

  • Always weighing his options, talks about them out loud, planning ahead, over and over.
  • His autistic "obsession" seems to be with rewards & consequences rather than merely objects. Sometimes deliberate sabotage behavior.
  • No magic bullet, varies day-to-day, somewhat unpredictable.
  • He may be using rewards/consequences to establish normalcy.

Academic Areas of Concern

  • Generalization of academic skills.
  • Pragmatic use of social language.
  • Lack of group-work skills due to time in general ed.
    (James may require extra time to complete a task because of his distractability, problems focusing on activities he doesn't like, etc.)

Positive Academic Skills

  • Math and calendar skills above grade level.

    Another digression: James has the calendar memorized months in advance and can tell you what day of the week a special or important date will fall on. He has a desktop calendar at home that he writes in. When I got him the calendar for this year he would not let go of it. That night he went to bed with it. On several occasions he has written down the opening dates of kid movies based on previews at the theater or TV spots--this even includes long-range previews from last year. While riding in the car he blabs on and on about movie dates and special events in his own version of broken English. On several occasions he has marked out things he doesn't like, including his last trip to the dentist. (The whole dentist experience was odd so I may post about that later.)

    Three months ago James finally showed interest in clocks. He already knows that at 60 minutes a new hour will begin. He is also able to associate time with posted restaurant or shop hours. Prior to his sudden interest in the clock, much of my efforts to get him interested in it failed; he picked up these skills suddenly on his own, his way, by osmosis.

  • Reading and comprehension near grade level.
  • Outstanding decoding abilities.
  • Good receptive and expressive vocabulary.

What teachers have tried

  • Ignoring behaviors.
  • Time-out routines.
  • Taking away reinforces.
  • Adding more frequent reinforcers (surprise box at noon, treasure chest at end of day). They had to add a noon reward because James would realize when he wouldn't have enough points for the rest of the day and just give up early--smart kid.
  • SCORES classroom visitation.
  • Increasing positive interactions and student selected activities/choices.

What the teachers would like to try

  • Additional time in general education.
  • Looking into a Social Behavioral Skills (SBS) program for James.

---

Anyway, good news.

3 Comments:

Blogger ramblingmuse said...

I saw this. It might be of interest to you?

http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/02/23/earlyshow/main1339324.shtml

Keep up with the posts! It's wonderful of you to share your story with us readers!

:-)

9:42 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

I would like to take this opportunity to express my thanks and admiration for your writing on behalf of autism. I work with the team over at Arico Foods (www.aicofoods.com), which produces a line of delicious and entirely organic cooks. The company's founders are both strong proponents of sound nutrition and healthy living. They strongly endorse gluten free products, while also finding time - both personally and professionally - to highlight those organizations and people (yourself included) who make a difference in the quest to treat autism.

As a token of appreciation, we would like to send you a complimentary box of Arico's cookies, which you may photograph and write about on your blog. Thanks again for all your good work.

--Lewis Fein
Telephone: 310-472-0520

9:44 PM  
Blogger M said...

From a mainstream teacher point of view I adore this blog. I'm interested in learning more about autism. Your son sounds like a fabulous person with many talents.

4:21 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home