Practical Social Skills for Autism Spectrum Disorders

Designing Child-Specific Interventions

13 March 2012

Kathleen Koenig (Author)

With a Foreword by Fred R. Volkmar

Description

Building a child’s “social repertoire” for more effective autism treatment.

Autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are an alarmingly prevalent topic of conversation in the news, in pediatrician and therapists’ offices, in classrooms, among concerned parents, and at home, within families. The rate of diagnoses seems only to rise. It’s not surprising that professionals who work with kids on the autism spectrum are eager for effective resources on how to help children and their parents or caregivers manage it. And with this book, readers have a new tool to add to their arsenal.

Drawing on her work at the Yale Child Study Center, Koenig explains how critical it is for kids to not simply learn new social skills that fit their individual needs, but to be able to seamlessly integrate them into a range of day-to-day situations, from the classroom to the lunchroom to the dinner table at home. Building their "social repertoire" in this way, she argues, is key to effective autism treatment. Unlike other autism books that tend to be prescriptive in their approach to social skills training, this one teaches that the best social interventions are evidence-based, child-specific, and meaningfully integrated.

Guiding readers through the overarching considerations and principles for designing successful social interventions, Koenig presents a host of specific techniques—visual strategies and supports, scripts and role play, developmental play approaches, video modeling, peer mediated approaches, technology-based instruction, group instruction, self-monitoring strategies, parent-delivered interventions, and much more. Case vignettes illustrate how each intervention can be implemented, and what trouble-shooting techniques can be used when a child isn’t responding well. Koenig also provides advice on how parents and professionals can work together as a team, how to help kids “generalize” their newly learned skills across contexts, and how to measure progress in a sensible way.

With a foreword by renowned child psychiatrist Fred Volkmar, Practical Social Skills for Autism Spectrum Disorders is sophisticated in its methodology but highly accessible, hands-on, and user-friendly. An invaluable manual for clinicians, educators, school counselors and administrators, parents, and all those who work with kids on the autism spectrum, it unravels the nuances of effective social skills training by showing how to really create intervention programs that take kids' own aptitudes and needs into account. With time, the right teaching, and compassion, they can achieve a life of full engagement with their families and communities.

Reviews

"[A] refreshing look into how to assist children with autism to reach their maximum social skills potential. . . . [P]rovides a blueprint with concrete techniques . . . . [A]n excellent resource for educators, parents, physicians, and trainees." — Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry

"I would highly recommend this book to professionals who want to learn effective strategies when working with children, adolescents, and families who have been diagnosed with an Autism Spectrum Disorder." — American Society for Adolescent Psychiatry Newsletter

"A powerful reference for educators and psychotherapists alike!" — Midwest Book Review

"Social skills training is central to all intervention programs for ASD, and this book is the foundation for developing and operating effective training." — Young-Shin Kim, MD, MS, MPH, PhD, Associate Professor, Yale University School of Medicine

Hardback

9780393706987

163 x 244 mm • 256 pages

£25.99

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9780393707748

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