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FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME FETAL ALCOHOL EFFECTS

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STRATEGIES FOR CLASSROOM TEACHERS ... Strategies for Classroom Teachers Continued... Some students are calmed by quiet background music. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME FETAL ALCOHOL EFFECTS


1
FETAL ALCOHOL SYNDROME / FETAL ALCOHOL EFFECTS
  • Presentation

2
PRESENTATION AGENDA
  • Background of Project
  • What is FAS/FAE?
  • Describing Common Learning and Behavioral
    Characteristics
  • Strategies for Learning

3
TIMELINES AND FAS/FAE
  • People with FAS / FAE may present a complex
    portrait of competencies and delays. It is not
    uncommon to encounter a mix of abilities and lags
    in any one person. The profile of maturation and
    strengths varies significantly between people
    with FAS / FAE. This chart is intended to provide
    a visual cue for gaps which may be masked by
    abilities (i.e., emotional dysmaturity may be
    hidden by strong expressive language skills.)

4
Timelines FAS/FAE Continued
  • It is when the expectation that a person is on
    time when they are actually developmentally much
    younger that conflict develops. Why dont you
    act your age! and Grow up are common comments
    which reflect frustration where immaturity has
    not been recognized as part of a normal
    variability in development. One parent said her
    feeling about her child changed after she was
    reminded to Think younger.

5
Actual Age of Individual 18
  • SKILL DEVELOPMENTAL AGE EQUIVALENT
  • Expressive Language
    20
  • Comprehension 6
  • Money, time concepts 8
  • Emotional Maturity 6
  • Physical Maturity
    18
  • Reading Ability
    16
  • Social Skills 7
  • Living Skills 11
  • 0 5
    10 15 20 25
  • Chronological Age

6
ATTENTIONAL DIFFICULTIES
  • A student with FAS/E may experience difficulty
    with
  • being over and under-responsive to stimuli,
  • remaining seated, fidgeting or squirming, and/or
  • acting without thinking.

7
STRATEGIES FOR CLASSROOM TEACHERS
  • Teach the student to use self-talk to help stay
    focused (e.g., The first thing I have to do
    is) and to curb impulsive behavior (e.g. Stop
    and Think). Model this behavior in order to
    encourage the student to do this.
  • Teach the student to curb impulsive behavior by
    knowing how to initiate action, when to initiate
    action, and how to inhibit behaviors until things
    are thought through.
  • Use concrete reinforcements or reminders (e.g.,
    the use of stop hand-signals) to help the student
    change problematic behavior such as calling out
    in class.

8
Strategies for Classroom Teachers Continued...
  • Consequences for inappropriate behavior need to
    be immediate.
  • A student who needs the stimulation of movement
    could do some activities, such as reading, in a
    rocking chair.
  • Try meeting the need for physical stimulation by
    taping sandpaper to the underside of the desk or
    attaching a squeezing (and strength-increasing)
    ball to the desk.
  • Some students are calmed by quiet background
    music.
  • Arrange a quiet area to use when distractions
    are too great.
  • Rhythmic activities such as choral reading,
    spelling and math chants are effective at holding
    attention.

9
Strategies for Classroom Teachers Continued...
  • Establish a signal to indicate frustration.
  • Teaching concepts through music can be effective.
  • Make each activity brief.
  • Ask the student for feedback about helpful
    leaning behaviors and not-so-helpful learning
    behaviors. For example, What can we do to make
    this work? and If this was not helpful, why
    not?

10
CAUSE AND EFFECT THINKING
  • A student with FAS/E may experience difficulty
    with
  • Understanding consequences and what they are for,
  • generalizing behavior from one setting to
    another,
  • predicting outcomes of different behaviors in new
    settings, and/or
  • working within a rigid and egocentric notion of
    what is fair.

11
STRATEGIES FOR CLASSROOM TEACHERS
  • Take time to talk with the child with FAS/E - you
    will find out how the child thinks. This can
    help you decide on what to do to help the student
    to formulate an appropriate strategy.
  • Decide what is most important and what is within
    the control of the child ignore the rest.
  • Be as consistent as possible in imposing
    consequences, make them as immediate as possible
    and remind the student what the consequences are
    for.

12
Strategies for Classroom Teachers Continued...
  • Help the student problem solve Where did the
    problem start?, What did I do?, Who did I
    affect?, What else could I have done?, and
    What else could I do next time? Write down
    what is said so that the student can follow the
    course of the conversation.
  • Help the student take another persons point of
    view.
  • Consider the students verbal and memory
    limitations in working through an incident with
    the student and deciding what the consequences
    should be.
  • Anticipate and prevent problems through close
    supervision or partnering with peers (i.e., buddy
    system, peer tutor).
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