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Each week I provide you with some of my ideas about turning autism around, so if you haven’t subscribed to my YouTube channel, you can do that now and join the thousands who already have.
In my career as a behavior analyst and even before I was a behavior analyst when I just had my son Lucas, I did have some experience with echolalia, both immediate echolalia and delayed echolalia. Several months ago I did do another video blog on delayed echolalia, which is really scripting and stimming. In that blog, I gave an example where when Lucas was young we would take him to the park. My husband and I would read him the signs, “please do not feed the duck, quack, quack.” Then we would go to the next sign, and say the same thing. Then in the middle of the night, he’d wake up and he would start repeating, “please do not feed the duck, quack, quack.” So what he was doing is he was engaging in scripting, which is delayed echolalia. He was remembering what we said and then he was saying it.
Or I had a client once who would repeat the “say” part of the instruction. So I would say “say banana” the child would say “say banana.” That’s obviously an error and we need to treat this echolalia to get the child to either answer yes or no or to get the child to respond with at least one word. So if you say “do you want a cookie?” and the child says “cookie” it’s still technically an error but you know if the child’s not ready for yes and no then that’s appropriate. I did do a video blog on teaching yes and no to kids with autism a while back. I developed a procedure on yes and no back when I was trying to help Lucas learn this important skill.
There’s also another really important assessment subtest that was created by Dr. Mark Sundberg with the VB-MAPP, but it’s not actually part of the VB-MAPP; It’s a supplement. This test is called the intraverbal subtest. You can get this online for free. It’s a really helpful tool to begin to assess the child’s ability to answer questions. The child might not be able to answer “what’s something that you eat for breakfast?” But they might be able to answer “you sleep in a” or “what does a cow say?” So maybe for easier questions, they can answer and get the intraverbal response, but when it gets to be harder, that’s where they can’t answer it. So doing a VB-MAPP assessment and doing an intraverbal subtest is great.
Then you need to make a plan, not just to get rid of the echolalia. The echolalia does have some benefits. We know the child can talk and many of our kids that have this echolalia actually have pretty good articulation. So those are all good things. We just have to direct that echolalia to make it more functional and to get the child to the next level. My online courses utilize the VB-MAPP, the intraverbal subtests, the self-care checklist, and all resources from Dr. Mark Sundberg. I’ve also created my own assessments where we basically step back, look at the whole picture, and help both parents and professionals figure out the next step for their own clients and children.
So if you would like to learn more about how to assess the whole picture and how to use the echolalia that we do have as an advantage and not a weakness, I’m going to encourage you to sign up for a free online workshop at marybarbera.com/workshop. If you enjoyed this video/blog, please leave me a comment, give me a thumbs up and share the video/blog with others who might benefit. And I hope to see you right here next week.