"My approach to intervention is rooted in respect for child development and focuses on making the mundane meaningful, looking at daily interactions as opportunities for learning and growth while respecting the uniqueness of the individual and family. It’s about setting high expectations for long term quality of life and relationships for individuals on the spectrum and implementing a specific and doable plan to get there one step at a time.”
– Lauren Wilson, LCSW, RDI® Program Certified Consultant
Showing posts with label Video Clip. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Video Clip. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Toolbox Tuesday: Foundations for Understanding Behavior

I had the great pleasure of chatting with an old colleague of mine yesterday and we spent some time talking about all our oldies but goodies.  The resources, research and perspectives that never go out of style.   The perspectives that provide an overarching guide no matter what your focus.  As you dive into autism interventions you will find such a variety.  No matter the path that works best for your family, the foundational perspectives that guide you have a profound effect on everyone involved.

Over the next few Tool Box Tuesdays, I will be spotlighting the foundational perspectives that my work is rooted in.  When I pause to consider what the theme is that runs through them all I see a theme of respect of the individual.  And one might think, well gosh, that must be a theme that runs through all foundations.  But in my experience consulting with a wide variety of teams, this is not always the case.  Respect for the individual begins always with the social work motto of "starting where the person is" and grows from there with learning who the person is, who the person wants to be.  Recognizing their strengths and recognizing their right to a developmentally based approach tailored to their unique needs.

And so I've digressed from what I consider one of the foundations to understanding behavior:  Kids do well if they can- a motto - and then entire philosophy coined by Dr. Ross Greene.  Give the clip a look see below, then we'll discuss a little bit more how this plays out as a foundation.


Alright, "Kids do well if they can" fundamentally different from the foundation of "Kids do well if they wanna".  Let's first consider the extremely different roles these two philosophies put us, the adults in.  As he says, from a Kids do well if they wanna perspective I'm left with the increased motivation role and explaining the behaviors from a "testing limits", oppositional standpoint.  Let's take a moment to consider how this makes us feel.  As parents, we've all fallen into the kids do well if they wanna perspective and been left feeling like, "wooo, they are just trying to push my buttons today!".  Chances are with that narrative our own level of stress is going to rise and in turn this will impact our response repertoire by limiting it.  No matter your parenting philosophy we can never do our best when we feel stressed and targeted.

Kids do well if they can changes the narrative to exploring- what's going wrong here?  What skill is missing?  What problem is unsolved?  Checking in with how well the child slept last night, when the last time they ate was and if they are sick or sensorily dysregulated.  It shifts the focus from the personal to the environment and things you can actually do something about.  Stress lowers and your repertoire of responses broadens.

Richard Lavoie's FAT City dovetails so nicely with this approach.  If you haven't seen it, although the hairstyles are a bit dated, I can't recommend it enough.  I wrote a bit about it here:  http://guidingfamilies.blogspot.com/2013/03/tuesday-tool-box-support.html

Until next week,
Lauren

Have a topic you'd like me to cover?  Just ask. :)



*Dr. Greene has many other wonderful clips that more fully flesh out these ideas, and the Collaborative Problem Solving Approach which I highly recommend http://www.livesinthebalance.org/walking-tour-parents.  
His list of "Lagging Skills and Unsolved Problems" can be quite eye opening as well http://www.livesinthebalance.org/paperwork*

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Kids do Well if They Can...

As a follow up the Always Never/Rule, it's great to refresh some of the ideas of Ross Greene...



Here he discusses the philosophy that we act from.  Do we see children as "Kids do well if they wanna?" or "Kids do well if they can?" It's quite a paradigm shift from what is popular.

Saturday, February 2, 2013

Fast & Slow Thinking



It's taking a bit for me to connect all the ways the examples in the video relate to guided participation- and individuals on the spectrum.  One of the first things that popped in my mind, was appraisal... and how the fast brain in all of us makes quick appraisals of situations... and how so often for individuals on the spectrum this appraisal is off and based on a non-essential element of the situation or relationship at hand.  Very interesting, I will be thinking about this more.

The Power of Thought



I found myself thinking about individuals on the spectrum who sometimes display rather static imagination, while their neurotypical counter parts display dynamic/ever changing imaginary play.  The leap I considered was if just the "imagination" of these scenarios changes neural connections... that so too would the static strengthen static connections.

Quite humbling exactly how pervasive a spectrum disorder is... and on the flip side how absolutely complex our neurology is.

Friday, January 25, 2013

What I wish I knew...

A beautiful and powerful video of parents sharing what they wish they knew the day of diagnosis.


Double click to play full screen.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Sharing an RDI Journey


Watch live streaming video from autismone2 at livestream.com

Parent and RDI Consultant shares her RDI Journey

Saturday, October 1, 2011

What is RDI?

This is a common question, and even after five years of being certified in the program, I have to admit I sometimes struggle to fit into a concise sentence, because on the one hand, it is so very very simple and on the other so very difficult.

What is RDI?  Applying typical development to kiddos for whom this has been a challenge.  

RDI Parents are often pleasantly surprised to find that there are no secret strategies to employ.  It's all the things parents are naturally amazing at, reading their child, providing safe challenging opportunities for growth, spotlighting memories and transferring wisdom.  The trick is doing all these amazing things at a slow, deliberate and individualized pace for their child on the spectrum.

It also seems most helpful to be able to "see" RDI.  Amy Cameron and a wonderful family of hers have provided a window into the world of an RDI family.


A quick search of RDI on youtube has many more examples by brave families who have put their learning out there for others to see.

Friday, September 30, 2011

What is Episodic Memory?

This *is* episodic memory, and quite a funny example of it.



Notice how emotion is tied in with the description of this memory, and the usefulness of how this young boy has embedded the memory.  The next time he is faced with a challenge, you can bet this memory will be used to remind him of his prior successes.

There has been a wonderful four part blog on Episodic Memory from a fellow RDI Consultant.  Episodic Memory and Children with ASD.  She does a beautiful job of breaking down a rather complex concept into easily understandable and transferable ideas.  These make for great sharing with friends, family and school team members.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

The Social Brain and ASD

New research from Ami Klin

The Social Brain and ASD

"The discovery of distinctive brain activity patterns for individuals with ASDs and their siblings has great potential to advance autism research and clinical practice. By looking at the functioning of socially- activated regions of the brain, we may be able to tell who does and does not have ASD. We may also be able to tell who seems fine but carries (and perhaps overcame) genetic risk for ASD. There may come a time when a diagnosis of ASD -- and even a measure of its severity -- is based not just on observation of external behavior but on this "neural signature." In addition, new treatments focused on social deficits may intentionally target activation of crucial brain regions, while the effectiveness of older treatments might be measured by how activation of the social brain changes over time."

 It has certainly been my experience that as children on the spectrum are given the opportunity to make those important neural connections make true progress in remediation.

Monday, September 19, 2011

Transitioning to Adulthood

I've been so thankful to see in the last few years more attention be paid to the transition to adulthood for individuals on the spectrum.

Recently the New York Times published a piece on the subject.  The video included in the story is a bittersweet look at the progress we have made as a community and the road we still have to travel.

Autistic and Seeking a Place in an Adult World

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Monday, January 24, 2011

Ross Greene: Collaborative Problem Solving


A wonderful resource from Dr. Ross Greene. There are many clips in the series that can be viewed on youtube or www.livesinthebalance.org