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Attending mainstream schools is always one of parents’ priorities. Parents of children with ASD wish their children could share the same school experience as other children. They are hoping that with time, their children will gradually get used to the environment and could learn through their peers in a school environment. However, they always overlook whether the child is ready for school. They may look for a teacher assistant or school shadow teacher when they receive complaint from school. It is critical for us to learn about the help that we look for to ensure we provide effective help for the child.

Below are some suggestions and guidelines of an effective school shadowing plan:

1. Having clear and specific short-term and long-term learning objectives

For example, student can read along with the class together without reminder/ being able to perform classroom routine independently. Steps include putting away his school bag, take out his folder and put his homework on the “Homework” tray.

2. Break down the skills and have a systematic plan to teach the skill

For example, our goal is to have the student to be able to read along with the class independently. Below could be the possible breakdown. Note that breakdown may be different for different students.

Phase 1:

School shadow teacher prompting student to “do the same” when the teacher asks students to read aloud.

Phase 2:

School shadow teacher being further away from student implementing a reinforcement contingency to provide consequence based on student’s performance in subtle way.

Phase 3:

School shadow teacher transfers the evaluation system to the class teacher. School shadow teacher may be around (e.g. at the back of the classroom) to observe student and provides signal to the class teacher to help provide the information that allow her to evaluate with the student.

3. Observe the data and evaluate the effectiveness of the procedure

Based on the breakdown of the skill, if data shows that the student has mastered the current phase, it indicates that the shadow teacher can systematically move onto the next phase and increase the level of difficulty. Alternatively, if data shows that the student has challenges in mastering the current phase, we should try to understand the reason and make hypothesis, for example, if there is mistake or confusion in data collection, if the student is not feeling well that week, whether the shadow teacher has implemented the procedure consistently, or if we need further break down for a specific phase.

Christy Lai

M.Sc., BCBA
Behavioral Consultant

Information provided by:

Ms. Christy Lai is a Board Certified Behavior Analyst with a Master of Science in Applied Behavior Analysis from St. Cloud State University and a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. Ms. Lai joined Autism Partnership (AP) in 2011 and she has extensive experience in working with children with ASD. Ms. Christy Lai currently take lead of the case supervision in the new established AP Beijing center. At the same time, she oversees the Little Learners program in Hong Kong and Shanghai and consults families in Asia. She directs overseas training to staff in the Train the Trainer program and provides parent education to families with children with ASD. She also conducts Jumpstart and PIIP programs locally and internationally. In additions, she is keen to take part in overseas ASD conferences and take lead of the design and production of AP teaching materials. Moreover, she helps with producing ABA training videos and articles in the APSPARKS website for public education.

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