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Re: Lovaas ABA to VB

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Mahija,

The best place to start on researching experiences with mixing and/or

transitioning between Lovaas and VB would be in the archives.

Contact one of the list moderators (contact emails on the bottom of most

printed out emails from the list I believe) for help in how to do that.

Briefly, in our experience using a no, no prompt sequence and VB don't mix

very well. If your using errorless teaching practices, the transition is

much easier. If you want an in depth discussion, feel free to contact me

privately. Making the transition can be scary, and extremely difficult to do

without a consultant. Some consultants are more open than others, and since

behavioral principles drive both programs your current consultant can still

be of assistance. That is of course, whether they truly know their

behaviorism and simply haven't been trained to rather rigidly apply a model.

On your teaching question. First of all, you need to stop thinking in terms

of nouns, adjectives, prepositions, gender, etc. and think in terms of mands,

tacts, RFFC/FFC and Intraverbals. Once you do, it gets easier to

conceptualize solutions for your particular child. This is what we did for

our son and emotions.

An emotion is really a label, or a tact, for a rather complex group of social

cues. So we reversed things by teaching the cues as actions (another set of

tacts) and then building FFC modules off of the actions. That's a mouthful

of a sentence, so let me give you an example.

We taught Grant crying. The therapist would present the Sd, " What am I

doing? " and pretend to cry. ( Please get them to act this out, it's much

more effective than flashcards) At first we prompted the response, then

faded. Once Grant mastered " crying " we made a tact to FFC transfer. When it

was done, it looked like this:

T: What am I doing?

G: Crying

T: What do you do when you're sad?

G: Cry. (Of course, the first few times, we had to prompt this).

Down the road, you could actually build a category built around the action of

crying. I guess you could call it, " When do you cry? " When I'm sad, hurt,

angry. " Or you make a category called " emotions. " The Sd could be " Name

some emotions " and the child responds with " sad, happy, mad, " The same can

easily be done with occupations. In terms of your question, just because a

child learns the words for a doctor, or policeman, etc., doesn't mean he'll

automatically make the association that they go together, you have to teach

them as FFCs and as a category. I guess the question here is if " Name some

occupations " would be a novel task for your child, than you haven't really

taught " occupations " That's exactly where we were when we started VB. While

Grant could label colors all day long, when asked " name some colors " he

didn't have a clue how to respond. (Actually Vince may have shown the video

of Grant naming colors for the first time in his life. It was the first day

my son exhibited any functional language of any type when he manded for

video.)

Hope this helps,

Mark

The neat thing for us is that by teaching emotions this way, Grant almost

immediately generalized into the natural environment. While he isn't nearly

as spontaneous as we'd like, he has seen his sister crying and said " She's

sad. " He even reads with emotion now.

We did mix and vary these in with other " programs. " Once again, one of the

things I recently have come to find immensely helpful is not to think in

terms of " programs " but rather " low probability " and " high probability. "

What are the things your child will likely answer (high probability) versus

what he finds difficult (low probability) and try to keep an 80/20 mix of

high/low probability. Otherwise there is a tendency to get into a rut and

work on each " program " at a time (mands, tacts, FFC, intraverbals) when you

shouldn't.

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The best place to start on researching experiences with mixing and/or

transitioning between Lovaas and VB would be in the archives.

 Contact one of the list moderators (contact emails on the bottom of most

printed out emails from the list I believe) for help in how to do that.  

Briefly, in our experience using a no, no prompt sequence and VB don't mix

very well.  If your using errorless teaching practices, the transition is

much easier.  If you want an in depth discussion, feel free to contact me

privately.  Making the transition can be scary, and extremely difficult to do

without a consultant.  Some consultants are more open than others, and since

behavioral principles drive both programs your current consultant can still

be of assistance.  That is of course, whether they truly know their

behaviorism and simply haven't been trained to rather rigidly apply a model.

On your teaching question.  First of all, you need to stop thinking in terms

of nouns, adjectives, prepositions, gender, etc. and think in terms of mands,

tacts, RFFC/FFC and Intraverbals.  Once you do, it gets easier to

conceptualize solutions for your particular child.  This is what we did for

our son and emotions.

An emotion is really a label, or a tact, for a rather complex group of social

cues.  So we reversed things by teaching the cues as actions (another set of

tacts) and then building FFC modules off of the actions.  That's a mouthful

of a sentence, so let me give you an example.

We taught Grant crying.  The therapist would present the Sd, " What am I

doing? " and pretend to cry.  ( Please get them to act this out, it's much

more effective than flashcards)  At first we prompted the response, then

faded.  Once Grant mastered " crying " we made a tact to FFC transfer. When it

was done, it looked like this:

T:  What am I doing?

G:  Crying

T:  What do you do when you're sad?

G:  Cry.  (Of course, the first few times, we had to prompt this).  

Down the road, you could actually build a category built around the action of

crying.  I guess you could call it, " When do you cry? "  When I'm sad, hurt,

angry. "  Or you make a category called " emotions. "  The Sd could be " Name

some emotions " and the child responds with " sad, happy, mad, "  The same can

easily be done with occupations.  In terms of your question, just because a

child learns the words for a doctor, or policeman, etc., doesn't mean he'll

automatically make the association that they go together, you have to teach

them as FFCs and as a category.  I guess the question here is if " Name some

occupations " would be a novel task for your child, than you haven't really

taught " occupations "  That's exactly where we were when we started VB.  While

Grant could label colors all day long, when asked " name some colors " he

didn't have a clue how to respond.  (Actually Vince may have shown the video

of Grant naming colors for the first time in his life.  It was the first day

my son exhibited any functional language of any type when he manded for

video.)

The neat thing for us is that by teaching emotions this way, Grant almost

immediately generalized into the natural environment.  While he isn't nearly

as spontaneous as we'd like, he has seen his sister crying and said " She's

sad. "  He even reads with emotion now.  

We did mix and vary these in with other " programs. "  Once again, one of the

things I recently have come to find immensely helpful is not to think in

terms of " programs " but rather " low probability " and " high probability. "

 What are the things your child will likely answer (high probability) versus

what he finds difficult (low probability) and try to keep an 80/20 mix of

high/low probability.  Otherwise there is a tendency to get into a rut and

work on each " program " at a time (mands, tacts, FFC, intraverbals) when you

shouldn't.  

Hope this helps,

Mark Cyr

" Children with autism are not learning disabled, they are teaching

challenges. "

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Dear List,

For those of you doing a VB program and pretty commited, I'd like to ask a

question about a topic I rarely see addressed here at all. I wonder if it's

just not considered as important, or if people are not addressing it in

their programs or what!

While I think Isaac's making better language gains with VB than he has ever

done with anything else, period, and is able to listen, and enjoy many new

things, I am not sure how this fits for other skill development, and nobody

ever discusses it. Does anyone else work on self help areas, chores, and

independent tasks?

Is this usually done incidently with you all or do you teach specific

components?

I realize my son is older, but I rarely see the variety of issues discussed

here that I used to on the ME list, less these days, and I wonder why?

It's not a negative commentary, as again we are pleased and intend on

staying with the Verbal Behavior Methodology. But, I do wonder about other

issues, and I'm feeling kind of puzzled about it.

Jennie

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Mark,

I just recently heard about the VB methodology. My son is 3 1/2 and was just

diagnosed

with autism this spring. We knew he needed help much sooner and got him

started in an

early intervention program at age 2. Other than O/T (floor play) and speech

therapy,

has never recieved ABA. He was very non-compliant at first. It was a big

step for him to

allow anyone in his space. After 1 1/2 years...he now works well with

therapists, and follows

directions at home and at his special needs preschool (provided by the school

system) with little

prompting. I feel he has made good progress so far. He now echos what I say

and uses

language mostly to request things, I believe he understands some language or

he wouldn't be able

to follow directions so well, however he has no expressive language yet. If

I ask him what happened

at school, he is unable to tell me anything. I am not pleased right now with

the minimum services he

is recieving through the school system. His speech therapist at school just

has him repeat what she

says with snack reinforcers. In my opinion repeating words is not teaching

functional language.

For example: She has him repeat " up " and " down " but he does not know what

they mean. I was

cutting his hair last night and told him to look down.....he looked up, then

when I told him to look up

he looked down. I am going to start VB with as soon as I can learn how.

I am convinced it will

help. I particularly like the fact VB is a more natural way of using ABA and

it also works immediately

on generalization. I am at the infancy stage of starting a VB program in my

home this summer. We just

ordered " Teaching Language to Children with Autism or Other Developmental

Disabilities " by Mike

Sundberg and Jim Partington. We also ordered a video. Please, if you could

share any helpful information

with me about how to start the VB program, how many hours to start with,

combinations of other therapies

that work well with this program, I would very much appreciate your help.

You sound so knowledgable

about the VB program. I feel I am at an advantage because has not had

ABA, therefore, I will

not have to reteach a new program, this should be an easy transition.

I refuse to accept the " bear minimum " my son has more potential than that!

Sue

Re: [ ] Lovaas ABA to VB

The best place to start on researching experiences with mixing and/or

transitioning between Lovaas and VB would be in the archives.

Contact one of the list moderators (contact emails on the bottom of most

printed out emails from the list I believe) for help in how to do that.

Briefly, in our experience using a no, no prompt sequence and VB don't mix

very well. If your using errorless teaching practices, the transition is

much easier. If you want an in depth discussion, feel free to contact me

privately. Making the transition can be scary, and extremely difficult to do

without a consultant. Some consultants are more open than others, and since

behavioral principles drive both programs your current consultant can still

be of assistance. That is of course, whether they truly know their

behaviorism and simply haven't been trained to rather rigidly apply a model.

On your teaching question. First of all, you need to stop thinking in terms

of nouns, adjectives, prepositions, gender, etc. and think in terms of mands,

tacts, RFFC/FFC and Intraverbals. Once you do, it gets easier to

conceptualize solutions for your particular child. This is what we did for

our son and emotions.

An emotion is really a label, or a tact, for a rather complex group of social

cues. So we reversed things by teaching the cues as actions (another set of

tacts) and then building FFC modules off of the actions. That's a mouthful

of a sentence, so let me give you an example.

We taught Grant crying. The therapist would present the Sd, " What am I

doing? " and pretend to cry. ( Please get them to act this out, it's much

more effective than flashcards) At first we prompted the response, then

faded. Once Grant mastered " crying " we made a tact to FFC transfer. When it

was done, it looked like this:

T: What am I doing?

G: Crying

T: What do you do when you're sad?

G: Cry. (Of course, the first few times, we had to prompt this).

Down the road, you could actually build a category built around the action of

crying. I guess you could call it, " When do you cry? " When I'm sad, hurt,

angry. " Or you make a category called " emotions. " The Sd could be " Name

some emotions " and the child responds with " sad, happy, mad, " The same can

easily be done with occupations. In terms of your question, just because a

child learns the words for a doctor, or policeman, etc., doesn't mean he'll

automatically make the association that they go together, you have to teach

them as FFCs and as a category. I guess the question here is if " Name some

occupations " would be a novel task for your child, than you haven't really

taught " occupations " That's exactly where we were when we started VB. While

Grant could label colors all day long, when asked " name some colors " he

didn't have a clue how to respond. (Actually Vince may have shown the video

of Grant naming colors for the first time in his life. It was the first day

my son exhibited any functional language of any type when he manded for

video.)

The neat thing for us is that by teaching emotions this way, Grant almost

immediately generalized into the natural environment. While he isn't nearly

as spontaneous as we'd like, he has seen his sister crying and said " She's

sad. " He even reads with emotion now.

We did mix and vary these in with other " programs. " Once again, one of the

things I recently have come to find immensely helpful is not to think in

terms of " programs " but rather " low probability " and " high probability. "

What are the things your child will likely answer (high probability) versus

what he finds difficult (low probability) and try to keep an 80/20 mix of

high/low probability. Otherwise there is a tendency to get into a rut and

work on each " program " at a time (mands, tacts, FFC, intraverbals) when you

shouldn't.

Hope this helps,

Mark Cyr

" Children with autism are not learning disabled, they are teaching

challenges. "

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