Saturday, April 3, 2010
5 Steps to Helping Kids Who Hate Noise
Fingernails screeching down a chalkboard. The booming bass on a car stereo. These are just a couple of sounds many people find irritating. For students with autism or other disabilities that affect sensory processing, many sounds that we take for granted can be difficult to ignore. The humming of fluorescent lights, the swishing and gurgling sounds of a flushing toilet, and the crackle that comes through the speakers for the morning announcements can be sources of angst for a child with noise sensitivity. Each child is unique, so what triggers one student may not bother the next and vice versa. The sounds not only lead to distraction, but may also induce a fight or flight response that brings about a meltdown.
1. Name the Noise
Help your student make a list of sounds that he finds so irritating that it interferes with his work, mood, or ability to interact with others.
2. Give the Reason for the Racket
For each sound, discuss why the sound occurs. For example, the fire alarm is loud and makes a strange sound so that people will want to leave the building. This is to keep us from staying in the building if there is a fire. The noise is to keep us safe.
3. Label the Noise as Passing or Persistent
Let the student know if an irritating sound that is currently present is likely to continue to occur. This is important because the student may want you to make the noise stop. Unfortunately, many of the sounds in the school setting that set off a student cannot be avoided. You cannot make Ava stop scratching her head because it irritates Brian. On the other hand, if a sound is in the environment temporarily, such as a fire alarm, then by all mean, emphasize the temporary nature of the sound. The point of working on the student's sound sensitivity is to learn coping strategies in a world filled with sound.
4. Teach the Use of Tools and Techniques
There are many tools and strategies that can help a student who is sensitive to sound. Here are some to try out:
- noise-canceling headphones
- earplugs
- mp3 player with music the student enjoys and headphones
- white noise machine
- fan
- putting hands over the ears (for sudden noises)
- access to a quiet place (a part of the classroom, a pass to another room)
5. Plan for Noisy Times
Some noise is predictable. For example, many students who are sensitive to noise bring their headphones to the cafeteria and the gym. These are places where students are louder and sounds echo off the walls. I had one student wear his headphones at recess and this enabled him to climb on the play structures. Without the headphones, he was too overwhelmed to climb and played alone most of the time.
Depending on your student's language and cognitive ability, you may wish to help him predict situations in which noise could become a trigger. Develop a graphic organizer or a cartoon that depicts:
- the situational trigger (e.g. students sees the teacher getting ready to show a video clip),
- the student thinking, "I think I'm going to hear some noise, but I know what I can do," and
- the student using a tool or a technique to cope with the situational trigger (the student puts on noise-canceling headphones).
Plan for situations that may be too overwhelming. If there is an assembly with loud music running for 2 hours, then you might want to plan an exit strategy. Let the student know how he can communicate with you that he needs a break.
Saturday, March 13, 2010
11 Autism Treatments That Really Work- Part III
Five More Treatments That Earned the NAC Stamp of Approval
Here are the final five treatments recommended by the National Autism Center (NAC) in its recent report (2009.) To qualify as a recommended, or "established" treatment, the intervention had to undergo rigorous review.
Peer Training Package
Peer trainers, classmates or siblings of children with autism, are responsible for "facilitating play and social interactions" with children with autism after they receive instruction.A school counselor works with a group of teenagers in a social group after school. The group involves social outings for students with and without disabilities. Mirabelle, a 13-year-old with Asperger's syndrome, benefits from being paired with Lacita, a teenage peer helper who models social skills prior to and during the outings. Lacita also helps Mirabelle with conversation skills by directly telling her that it is time to change topics and letting her know what nonverbal cues she was giving that hinted at the conversation needing a topic switch.
Pivotal Response Treatment
Pivotal skills are behaviors that are critical and have a synergistic effect on a child's development. Examples include responding to multiple cues, improving motivation, and self-initiation (e.g. asking questions).
Photo by WoodleyWonderWorks at Flickr.com
Schedules
The use of schedules, as intended by the National Autism Center's report, refers to breaking down activities into their steps and providing a list of these steps. A visual schedule may be in written, pictorial, photograph, or even object form.A 4-year-old with autism is learning to wash his hands. Above the sink at home, his parents have posted photographs of the steps involved in washing his hands. As they are teaching him to wash his hands, they point to each step on the schedule.
Self-Management
Individuals are encouraged to regulate their own behavior by setting their own goals and recording how often behaviors occur (or do not occur.)Tyrone, a middle school student with autism, works with a special education teacher to set goals for his behavior. He has been getting into trouble in English class for repeatedly calling out. He decides he wants to work on decreasing this behavior. He and his special education teacher develop a weekly sheet on which he will tally the number of times he calls out and the number of times he wants to call out but does not. They will review the results of the data at the end of each week.
Story-Based Intervention Package
Carol Gray's Social StoriesTM are the best-known story-based interventions used with individuals with autism. They are usually brief stories that assist a person in navigating a social situation. For a detailed explanation, visit The Gray Center.Michael, a 7-year-old with autism, is going to the dentist. His parents write a story, which is accompanied by illustrations, to assist in alleviating his anxiety about the visit and to help him know how what his role is in the visit. Here is a paragraph from his story:
Do you have a favorite intervention from the 11 Autism Treatments That Really Work? An experience with one of the treatments that you would like to share? Send a comment.
When the dentist is cleaning my teeth, I will keep my arms at my sides. The dentist likes my arms to be away from my mouth so she can see what she is doing. I will try to stay still. The dentist is able to be more gentle when I do not wiggle. She wants to be gentle.![]()
By Suat Eman
11 Autism Treatments That Really Work- Part I
11 Autism Treatments That Really Work- Part II

