Teaching Reading to Students with Autism
There is growing research on
the best way to teach reading to
students with Autism and other similar disorders. There are three main
components that have been found to be essential for these Autistic learners: First,
most are visual learners and need to have their material presented to them visually.
Second, they do better with simple, concise and minimal directions or instructions
for completing a task or applying a skill. Third, many do well with
phonics based
instruction presented in a visual and simple manner.
The
Discover Intensive Phonics method addresses these three issues. First,
our program is
Orton-Gillingham based, which means it is a multi-sensory method that teaches
to all learning styles including visual and kinesthetic that is so valuable to these
learners. Second, the method is explicit and sequential, meaning that it is taught
in a clear, direct manner that starts from simple concepts and gradually moves to
more complex concepts, always building upon the previous skill to ensure reinforcement
and retention. Several reading programs are full of long rules or jump around from
one phonics concept to the next. This does not work well with these learners. Our
program is successful because it is simple and has only
5 Phonetic Skills and
Two Decoding Skills to apply in order to be able to read any size word. They don’t have
to articulate why the word says what it does, they can visually see what it says
thanks to the marking system that helps them prove the word. Finally, this phonics
program will help them develop phonemic awareness and teach them phonics in the
way their brain learns. We also address sight words and attach meaning so that they
can remember those easier for retrieval. We offer visual cues to help learn the
sounds of the alphabet and have pictures associated with the words on the software
to aid in understanding and vocabulary development.
The following article discusses these points and shares other insightful information
in teaching children and adults with Autism.
Learn more about the Discover Intensive
Phonics method or Sample a Skill
to get a better feel for how effective this program can be.
Teaching Tips for Children and Adults with Autism
Temple Grandin, Ph.D.
Assistant Professorr
Colorado State University
Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA
(Revised: December 2002)
What Parents and Schools Can Do
Between the ages of 2 1/4 and 5 my day was structured, and I was not allowed to
tune out. I had 45 minutes of one-to-one speech therapy five days a week, and my
mother hired a nanny who spent three to four hours a day playing games with me and
my sister. She taught 'turn taking' during play activities. When we made a snowman,
she had me roll the bottom ball; and then my sister had to make the next part. At
mealtimes, every-body ate together; and I was not allowed to do any "stims." The
only time I was allowed to revert back to autistic behavior was during a one-hour
rest period after lunch. The combination of the nursery school, speech therapy,
play
activities, and "miss manners" meals added up to 40 hours a week, where
my brain was kept connected to the world.
- Many people with autism are visual thinkers. I think
in pictures. I do not think in language. All my thoughts are like videotapes running
in my imagination. Pictures are my first language, and words are my second language.
Nouns were the easiest words to learn because I could make a picture in my mind
of the word. To learn words like "up" or "down," the teacher should demonstrate
them to the child. For example, take a toy airplane and say "up" as you make the
airplane takeoff from a desk. Some children will learn better if cards with the
words "up" and "down" are attached to the toy airplane. The "up" card is attached
when the plane takes off. The "down" card is attached when it lands.
- Avoid long strings of verbal instructions. People with
autism have problems with remembering the sequence. If the child can read, write
the instructions down on a piece of paper. I am unable to remember sequences. If
I ask for directions at a gas station, I can only remember three steps. Directions
with more than three steps have to be written down. I also have difficulty remembering
phone numbers because I cannot make a picture in my mind.
- Many children with autism are good at drawing, art and
computer programming. These talent areas should be encouraged. I think there needs
to be much more emphasis on developing the child's talents. Talents can be turned
into skills that can be used for future employment.
- Many autistic children get fixated on one subject such
as trains or maps. The best way to deal with fixations is to use them to motivate
school work. If the child likes trains, then use trains to teach reading and math.
Read a book about a train and do math problems with trains. For example, calculate
how long it takes for a train to go between New York and Washington.
- Use concrete visual methods to teach number concepts.
My parents gave me a math toy which helped me to learn numbers. It consisted of
a set of blocks which had a different length and a different color for the numbers
one through ten. With this I learned how to add and subtract. To learn fractions
my teacher had a wooden apple that was cut up into four pieces and a wooden pear
that was cut in half. From this I learned the concept of quarters and halves.
- I had the worst handwriting in my class. Many autistic
children have problems with motor control in their hands. Neat handwriting is sometimes
very hard. This can totally frustrate the child. To reduce frustration and help
the child to enjoy writing, let him type on the computer. Typing is often much easier.
- Some autistic children will learn reading more easily
with phonics, and others will learn best by memorizing whole words. I learned with
phonics. My mother taught me the phonics rules and then had me sound out my words.
Children with lots of echolalia will often learn best if flash cards and picture
books are used so that the whole words are associated with pictures. It is important
to have the picture and the printed word on the same side of the card. When teaching
nouns the child must hear you speak the word and view the picture and printed word
simultaneously. An example of teaching a verb would be to hold a card that says
"jump," and you would jump up and down while saying "jump."
- When I was a child, loud sounds like the school bell
hurt my ears like a dentist drill hitting a nerve. Children with autism need to
be protected from sounds that hurt their ears. The sounds that will cause the most
problems are school bells, PA systems, buzzers on the score board in the gym, and
the sound of chairs scraping on the floor. In many cases the child will be able
to tolerate the bell or buzzer if it is muffled slightly by stuffing it with tissues
or duct tape. Scraping chairs can be silenced by placing slit tennis balls on the
ends of the legs or installing carpet. A child may fear a certain room because he
is afraid he may be suddenly subjected to squealing microphone feedback from the
PA system. The fear of a dreaded sound can cause bad behavior. If a child covers
his ears, it is an indicator that a certain sound hurts his ears. Sometimes sound
sensitivity to a particular sound, such as the fire alarm, can be desensitized by
recording the sound on a tape recorder. This will allow the child to initiate the
sound and gradually increase its volume. The child must have control of playback
of the sound.
- Some autistic people are bothered by visual distractions
and fluorescent lights. They can see the flicker of the 60-cycle electricity. To
avoid this problem, place the child's desk near the window or try to avoid using
fluorescent lights. If the lights cannot be avoided, use the newest bulbs you can
get. New bulbs flicker less. The flickering of fluorescent lights can also be reduced
by putting a lamp with an old-fashioned incandescent light bulb next to the child's
desk.
- Some hyperactive autistic children who fidget all the
time will often be calmer if they are given a padded weighted vest to wear. Pressure
from the garment helps to calm the nervous system. I was greatly calmed by pressure.
For best results, the vest should be worn for twenty minutes and then taken off
for a few minutes. This prevents the nervous system from adapting to it.
- Some individuals with autism will respond better and
have improved eye contact and speech if the teacher interacts with them while they
are swinging on a swing or rolled up in a mat. Sensory input from swinging or pressure
from the mat sometimes helps to improve speech. Swinging should always be done as
a fun game. It must NEVER be forced.
- Some children and adults can sing better than they can
speak. They may respond better if words and sentences are sung to them. Some children
with extreme sound sensitivity will respond better if the teacher talks to them
in a low whisper.
- Some nonverbal children and adults cannot process visual
and auditory input at the same time. They are mono-channel. They cannot see and
hear at the same time. They should not be asked to look and listen at the same time.
They should be given either a visual task or an auditory task. Their immature nervous
system is not able to process simultaneous visual and auditory input.
- In older nonverbal children and adults touch is often
their most reliable sense. It is often easier for them to feel. Letters can be taught
by letting them feel plastic letters. They can learn their daily schedule by feeling
objects a few minutes before a scheduled activity. For example, fifteen minutes
before lunch give the person a spoon to hold. Let them hold a toy car a few minutes
before going in the car.
- Some children and adults with autism will learn more
easily if the computer key-board is placed close to the screen. This enables the
individual to simultaneously see the keyboard and screen. Some individuals have
difficulty remembering if they have to look up after they have hit a key on the
keyboard.
- Nonverbal children and adults will find it easier to
associate words with pictures if they see the printed word and a picture on a flashcard.
Some individuals do not under-stand line drawings, so it is recommended to work
with real objects and photos first. The picture and the word must be on the same
side of the card.
- Some autistic individuals do not know that speech is
used for communication. Language learning can be facilitated if language exercises
promote communication. If the child asks for a cup, then give him a cup. If the
child asks for a plate, when he wants a cup, give him a plate. The individual needs
to learn that when he says words, concrete things happen. It is easier for an individual
with autism to learn that their words are wrong if the incorrect word resulted in
the incorrect object.
- Many individuals with autism have difficulty using a
computer mouse. Try a roller ball (or tracking ball) pointing device that has a
separate button for clicking. Autistics with motor control problems in their hands
find it very difficult to hold the mouse still during clicking.
- Children who have difficulty understanding speech have
a hard time differentiating between hard consonant sounds such as 'D' in dog and
'L' in log. My speech teacher helped me to learn to hear these sounds by stretching
out and enunciating hard consonant sounds. Even though the child may have passed
a pure tone hearing test he may still have difficulty hearing hard consonants. Children
who talk in vowel sounds are not hearing consonants.
- Several parents have informed me that using the closed
captions on the television helped their child to learn to read. The child was able
to read the captions and match the printed works with spoken speech. Recording a
favorite program with captions on a tape would be helpful because the tape can be
played over and over again and stopped.
- Some autistic individuals do not understand that a computer
mouse moves the arrow on the screen. They may learn more easily if a paper arrow
that looks EXACTLY like the arrow on the screen is taped to the mouse.
- Children and adults with visual processing problems
can see flicker on TV type computer monitors. They can sometimes see better on laptops
and flat panel displays which have less flicker.
- Children and adults who fear escalators often have visual
processing problems. They fear the escalator because they cannot determine when
to get on or off. These individuals may also not be able to tolerate fluorescent
lights. The Irlen colored glasses may be helpful for them.
- Individuals with visual processing problems often find
it easier to read if black print is printed on colored paper to reduce contrast.
Try light tan, light blue, gray, or light green paper. Experiment with different
colors. Avoid bright yellow--it may hurt the individual's eyes. Irlen colored glasses
may also make reading easier. (Click
here to visit the Irlen Institute's web site.)
- Teaching generalization is often a problem for children
with autism. To teach a child to generalize the principle of not running across
the street, it must be taught in many different locations. If he is taught in only
one location, the child will think that the rule only applies to one specific place.
- A common problem is that a child may be able to use
the toilet correctly at home but refuses to use it at school. This may be due to
a failure to recognize the toilet. Hilde de Clereq from Belgium discovered that
an autistic child may use a small non-relevant detail to recognize an object such
as a toilet. It takes detective work to find that detail. In one case a boy would
only use the toilet at home that had a black seat. His parents and teacher were
able to get him to use the toilet at school by covering its white seat with black
tape. The tape was then gradually removed and toilets with white seats were now
recognized as toilets.
- Sequencing is very difficult for individuals with severe
autism. Sometimes they do not understand when a task is presented as a series of
steps. An occupational therapist successfully taught a nonverbal autistic child
to use a playground slide by walking his body through climbing the ladder and going
down the slide. It must be taught by touch and motor rather than showing him visually.
Putting on shoes can be taught in a similar manner. The teacher should put her hands
on top of the child’s hands and move the child’s hands over his foot so he feels
and understands the shape of his foot. The next step is feeling the inside and the
outside of a slip-on shoe. To put the shoe on, the teacher guides the child’s hands
to the shoe and, using the hand-over-hand method, slides the shoe onto the child’s
foot. This enables the child to feel the entire task of putting on his shoe.
- Fussy eating is a common problem. In some cases the
child may be fixated on a detail that identifies a certain food. Hilde de Clerq
found that one child only ate Chiquita bananas because he fixated on the labels.
Other fruit such as apples and oranges were readily accepted when Chiquita labels
were put on them. Try putting different but similar foods in the cereal box or another
package of a favorite food. Another mother had success by putting a homemade hamburger
with a wheat free bun in a McDonald's package.
learn more about
how the
Discover Intensive Phonics for Yourself program can help with any
learning style and speed.