Positive Behavioral Change Practical Strategies for Changing Behavior Across the Lifespan Presented by Barbara T. Doyle, MS Clinical Consultant www.barbaradoyle.com 2013 The ARC of Illinois Living with Autism Conference Let’s focus on:  Quickly targeting essential skills and issues  More efficient teaming  Recognizing and celebrating what is working  Teaching appropriate and efficient replacement behavior  Providing peers with information and support  Keeping track of what teams are doing 2 If you learn only one word of Japanese: KAIZEN Kaizen means continuous improvement involving everyone. Kaizen means preserve what is working well while focusing on what needs to be done next. Adapted from Kaizen: The Key to Japan’s Competitive Success, by Masaaki Imai 3 Step One: Kaizen       Kaizen: celebrates and preserves what is working well. Helps us recognize where to put more focused attention and effort. Provides an informal record of discussion and progress Quickly do a Kaizen at the beginning of each team meeting. Be sure it is signed and dated as everything written about anyone must be Take a look at a sample Kaizen 4 “We must BE the change we wish to see in the world.” Mahatma Gandhi 5 Five Unifying Assumptions:  We are all fully human  We all have thoughts and feelings beyond what we can express  Without communication we cannot be safe or successful  Everyone has a right to strive for a high quality of life  We should use only socially valid interventions 6 The Assumption of Competence Assume that there is always more “internal life” in a human being than what they are able to show us, even when they are babies and little children, even when they have lots of “Ds,” even when they cannot speak or perform according to an age expectation. “I’ve always been in here.” 7 The difference between the right word and the almost right word is the difference between lightning and the lightning bug. Mark Twain If thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought. George Orwell 8 Step Two: Teaming Skills  Let’s review the handout: Objective vs. Subjective  Let’s look at the handout Avoid Psychiatric Terms”  Rate yourself on your own objectivity and your use of terms. How well do you separate facts from opinions? Is there anything that you want to change? 9 The Two-Minute Teaming Rule  The person who disagrees has two minutes to say everything they want to about why they disagree. NO ONE INTERRUPTS  Everyone else takes notes about every point being made  After the two minutes, someone reads the notes back to be sure the person was understood  Then, the meeting proceeds 10 Teaming Skills: Assume CAN’T instead of WON’T Assumption of Won’t leads to punishment, power struggles, rejection, and embarrassment (YIKES!) 11 of Can’t leads to creative problem solving, and creative interventions  Assumption of Can’t keeps everyone in a more calm emotional state  Assumption of Can’t models interpersonal support, belonging, and acceptance  Assumption 12 Discuss and take notes with a partner  What are some positive, non-clinical words to use to describe people and what they do?  What are three ways that descriptions can affect our interactions, service, and outcomes?  How can we better describe children and adults focusing on their unique qualities as individuals? 13 Step Three: Make a List  List current problems and issues the person is experiencing  Describe each objectively  Retain subjective opinions as to cause: this will be addressed in Step 6 14 Step 4: Prioritize the most serious behaviors to address Use these test questions to determine priorities:  “If I allow this person to do this behavior, will the police come? Will an ambulance come? Will I lose my job? Will anyone be in danger? Will the person be at risk?”  If the answers are all no, it might not be a priority behavior at this time. Stay calm, reduce input (like stop talking and touching) and keep everyone safe.  Make a note and ask for help BEFORE this happens again. 15 Categorize and Prioritize Sort” behavior into four categories:  Dangerous or potentially dangerous  Stigmatizing  Unconventional  Conventional Take a look at the Behavioral Prioritization Grid 16 Step Five: Choose Target Behavior and Take Data  Select one or two high priority behaviors to address now  Collect simple data: slash and tally, paperclips in cups, hourly or activity-based sampling.  Use the Data collection sheet for low incidence behavior or to sample more frequent behavior  Someone needs to collect and analyze data with charts and graphs: saves time, reveals hidden causes. Assign this responsibility. 17 ISBN# 0-8077-2911-6 18 Step Six: Develop Hypotheses  “Best guesses” as to underlying causes for each behavior  Be sure to note them as subjective.  For each hypothesis, brainstorm a way to test it. Some things cannot be tested.  Make the plan to test. Assign responsibilities and timelines.  Take a look at the Sample Hypotheses and Testing Plans handout 19 Remember  Everyone is always making sense.  No one does anything “out of the blue.”  No one does anything “for no reason.”  Everyone does things responding to internal stimulus or external stimulus  Put yourself in the person’s shoes: What if they did not have a disability label? 20 Step Six: Develop Hypotheses  Think about the “Why” behind the behavior.  Don’t get “stuck” on “avoiding task,” or “wanting attention.” People with ASD are complex, just like everyone else.  Look at sensory issues as causes.  Don’t blame the person, the parents, or yourself.  Consider “fear” and “confusion” 21 Step Six: Develop Hypotheses Some VERY common underlying causes are:  Medication and medication side effects  Being sick or in pain  Having an undiagnosed condition  Having an untreated condition  Take people with disabilities to the doctor if their behavior changes quickly or becomes severe. 22 A word about medications  There are no medications designed to be used to change the behavior of children and adults with ASD  All medications have side effects, some are uncomfortable, some are fatal  People with ASD are less able to tell us if they are experiencing side effects  Take a look at your handout about the use of medications 23 Step Seven: Select Replacement Behavior Select one or more replacement behaviors that:  Have HIGH impact on people and events  Send the same message without danger or destruction  Are easier (may not be the best, but better than current behavior)  Can be seen and reinforced  Can have data collected about them 24 What are some important lifetime behavioral goals?  Being a safe person (not hurting self or others, not destroying property)  Having safe ways to express all emotions (there are no wrong or bad emotions)  Using privacy (caring completely for own body, respecting others’ privacy) 25 ISBN # 1-885477-94-5 26 What are some important lifetime behavioral goals? But what about compliance???  Compliance as a goal might be over-rated! What if the people with disabilities did what everyone told them to?  Systematically teach compliance to safety and most important instructions  Teach exceptions to compliance 27 Step Seven: Select Replacement Behavior  If you can, begin to teach replacement behavior, in private sessions/therapies  Think about teaching, not just talking.  Take a look at your handout: Using Visual Strategies to Support and Teach Successfully  Take a look at the sample “Replacement Behavior” chart 28 Step Eight: Design Motivation Systems:  Why should people be “rewarded?”  Neurological effects of working for rewards include organization, focus, endurance, tolerance, motivation, persistence…  Why might verbal praise not be enough?  Always add verbal praise but recognize it may not MOTIVATE people with social communication issues 29 Step Eight: Design Motivation Systems:  What about “bribes?”  Use only for objectively-defined, target behaviors  Keep it simple, Sweetheart  Be sure people earn rewards quickly in the beginning  Later, teach self-monitoring 30 Step Eight: Design Motivation Systems:  Can use different systems in different places  Allow the person to choose and work for a specific liked object, activity, person or environment that you can easily provide.  Consider reduction in the amount of “less preferred” work as a reward  Look at the Reinforcement Inventory 31 Step Nine: Real Inclusion “Clue In”  Can have general discussions that are not person-specific at any time  Provide reasonable explanations for what others observe  Get appropriate permissions before talking about a person specifically 32 We are changing our world! Each time a (person) stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, s/he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope, and crossing each other from a million centers of energy and daring, those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance. Robert F. Kennedy P.S. This would be us! 33 Step Ten: What Will You Do Now? It is only in the doing, the applying, that knowledge and understanding are internalized. Stephen R. Covey, “The Eighth Habit: From Effectiveness to Greatness” 34 Thank you for all you do! To contact me: Barbara T. Doyle, M.S. 708-966-4683 barbaratdoyle@gmail.com www.barbaradoyle.com www.asdatoz.com 35 Two award-winning books by Barbara T. Doyle MS and Emily Doyle Iland MA ISBN# 0-9768222-0-2 ISBN# 1-932565-07-8 36 Two New Products from Barbara T. Doyle, MS Three Hour CD Set for Staff, Teachers, Therapists and Families DVD Teach Sign Language to People with Communication Needs 37
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