You are truly welcome AJ. I have a 2 year old son on the spectrum and ABA has taught me a lot. My son does 20 hours a week. I really admire your patients, understanding and caring.
Doesn't look to me that way. More like he is very sensitive towards his shoulders and enjoys it. He did protect his head, though. Maybe he was over stimulated at that point or just couldn't anticipate what was about to happen.
Great video. Some of these i use with an older child i work with ar work, he knows when hes angry and not talking to me with respect i will not speak to him until he does and it really works. Token economy is good for getting him to do work too, however he is now rushing his work just to get the token meaning he gets it all wrong, so i may need to rethink it
Although I introduced general behavioral techniques in this video, it is important to be aware that each individual with autism is different. An ABA practitioner (i.e., BCBA) should create a behavior plan that fits their unique needs.
I’m curious why I keep seeing that weird tickling in every ABA therapy video I watch…I have 2 autistic children and as I weigh out therapy options I keep seeing these bizarre tickles and in your face motions followed by some squeaky loud voices..why is this done? It’s uncomfortable to watch…
I'm about to get an evaluation for autism (I 'm an adult so it's much harder) but I was watching this and thought to myself how uncomfortable this system would be - the tickling and random touches especially. It would put me on guard. Tickling personllay gives me EXTREME anxiety and makes me want to panic. I do not want to be randomly touched like that. This would be so overstimulating for me as a kid and even now.. I am personally glad I never had to go through this therapy
I thought it was part of desensitization. Neurotypical kids usually like tickling and high pitched reward voices are excitement and rewarding. Autistic kids usually don't. So, by using touch as a reward they're trying to get the kids used to being touched.
Behaviour analysts use a reinforcer preference assessment before designing a teaching plan for a learner. Everything, including the choice of reinforcer, is data-driven, using data from the situation with the learner and their environment. A lot of people make unnecessarily harsh assumptions about BCBAs, BCaBAs and RBTs. This is based on a culture of hate in the community to which they belong: the whole anti-ABA community, whose entire premise is based on lies told on a website two decades ago that has long since disappeared off the net. I wonder why. Did it turn out that its makers were absolute liars? Probably, since not a single report could be found from the periods claimed for the 'torture' and the 'abuse' in either newspapers or police/hospital reports or in journals ... and, if it were happening as they told it, there WOULD have been reports of it. I spent a year looking into this for my M. Ed. in educational psychology. Not a single case came up. And not a single piece of literature has been produced on the topic that was something that a third-grade school project could have bettered in terms of quality.
I don't think the boy appreciated being touched in the manner you were touching him. The girl was trying to communicate with you in her natural way, and you ignored her. That's the same as the silent treatment.
Neurotipical people cannot teach their form of communication to autistic people as their non autistic behaviour is caused by their neurological wiring.More bluntly they don`t think about what they do, just act according to their neurological program, so do we autistics. It is like there is a computer program who responds a certain way and we want to change that by punishing the computer with a nice slap on the screen when it says something undesirable, or giving it a cake when it says something desirable, it is a clearly futile action. Just like a program can only be changed by changing the program, take the processor out and put a different program in it. As we are not computers, our processor = our brain cannot be taken out and changed which means our program cannot be changed!!!!!! :) The right approach is treat autism like a different language, as we autistics are very intelligent but we communicate on a different language!
@@jerzygrudka1962 I think they mean HOW they teach them. ABA is rooted in teaching autistics to "act normal", which most people who go through it just end up masking or being traumatized by it.
@@mostrandomthings3797 I don't think everyone hates autistic people as you said. I just think most people don't understand. In this time and age though, autism awareness is increasing
You should be brought up on potential criminal charges for an egrgeious display with respect to not an infintesimal notion of what constitutes childhood mental health in your painful and stunning presentation of anti-therapeutic and ant-developmental practices.
You did a really GREAT job with this video! Thank you!
Thank you!
This reminds me of a parent working with his child using techniques learned from ABA. And if I may, what a wonderful job this parent is doing.
Thank you very much, Chuck!
You are truly welcome AJ. I have a 2 year old son on the spectrum and ABA has taught me a lot. My son does 20 hours a week. I really admire your patients, understanding and caring.
I love how expresive & serious boys face is :)
and it's so great how therapist reward boy with 'touch' play
no hes truamatized because hes being touched repeatedly
Doesn't look to me that way. More like he is very sensitive towards his shoulders and enjoys it. He did protect his head, though. Maybe he was over stimulated at that point or just couldn't anticipate what was about to happen.
awesome video! Thanks for taking the time to make it
Thank you, Anna!
Thank you for sharing. It was helpful
Thank you, Bibi.
Please make more videos!! God bless you✝️💙
Hey ! This video is educative for neurodevelopmental kids.
Pl make more such videos n help us.
no it isnt its litterally traumatizing for us
@@amberharmsen2497 seems u haven't tried aba coz if u had tried u would hav known d benefits of it. Anyway Gud 👍 luck.
This made me smile ❤️
Your work is very good . please make more videos
Thank you for sharing ❤️
Thanks man.. You are doing good
Vídeo maravilhoso, podia fazer outros muito bom👏👏👏😍😍💙
You know what sometimes it’s okay for child to feel frustrated but you would have to wait for them to calm down.
This is a great video. Thank you!
Thank you, Ami-Lyn.
This is so sweet ❤
Great video. Some of these i use with an older child i work with ar work, he knows when hes angry and not talking to me with respect i will not speak to him until he does and it really works.
Token economy is good for getting him to do work too, however he is now rushing his work just to get the token meaning he gets it all wrong, so i may need to rethink it
Where can I get a copy of that emotions visual? That is a great one!
You can make it on your own if you have a laminating machine and Velcro. Thanks!
Thank you ❤️
He's like, im not allowed to throw a ball in the house
Thank for video . How can we connect you .we learnt a lo from you.
That kiddo followed your instructions. If you have a learner with a severe spectrum, how can you start with ABA??
Although I introduced general behavioral techniques in this video, it is important to be aware that each individual with autism is different. An ABA practitioner (i.e., BCBA) should create a behavior plan that fits their unique needs.
I like how he applied his techniques, but some of the children don't like to be touched. even if playing. Looking at his face not too happy.
Is that your child or your client? Does he have any diagnosis?
his child
I’m curious why I keep seeing that weird tickling in every ABA therapy video I watch…I have 2 autistic children and as I weigh out therapy options I keep seeing these bizarre tickles and in your face motions followed by some squeaky loud voices..why is this done? It’s uncomfortable to watch…
I'm about to get an evaluation for autism (I 'm an adult so it's much harder) but I was watching this and thought to myself how uncomfortable this system would be - the tickling and random touches especially. It would put me on guard. Tickling personllay gives me EXTREME anxiety and makes me want to panic. I do not want to be randomly touched like that. This would be so overstimulating for me as a kid and even now.. I am personally glad I never had to go through this therapy
Because some kids like to be tickled and that's why some professionals use that as a reinforcer.
I thought it was part of desensitization. Neurotypical kids usually like tickling and high pitched reward voices are excitement and rewarding. Autistic kids usually don't. So, by using touch as a reward they're trying to get the kids used to being touched.
That's how therapist keeps his attention.
Behaviour analysts use a reinforcer preference assessment before designing a teaching plan for a learner. Everything, including the choice of reinforcer, is data-driven, using data from the situation with the learner and their environment.
A lot of people make unnecessarily harsh assumptions about BCBAs, BCaBAs and RBTs. This is based on a culture of hate in the community to which they belong: the whole anti-ABA community, whose entire premise is based on lies told on a website two decades ago that has long since disappeared off the net. I wonder why. Did it turn out that its makers were absolute liars? Probably, since not a single report could be found from the periods claimed for the 'torture' and the 'abuse' in either newspapers or police/hospital reports or in journals ... and, if it were happening as they told it, there WOULD have been reports of it.
I spent a year looking into this for my M. Ed. in educational psychology. Not a single case came up. And not a single piece of literature has been produced on the topic that was something that a third-grade school project could have bettered in terms of quality.
I reckon this is useful for some ‘neurotypical’ kids too.
no no its not
its traumatizing because we are being touched against our will
@@amberharmsen2497 High five?
The small girl is better at it than the trow me the ball kid
I believe this needs accuracy not speed.
Ableism at its finest
I don't think the boy appreciated being touched in the manner you were touching him. The girl was trying to communicate with you in her natural way, and you ignored her. That's the same as the silent treatment.
thank you for realizing this
so many of my friends including me have trauma from this shit and it hasnt changed
Neurotipical people cannot teach their form of communication to autistic people as their non autistic behaviour is caused by their neurological wiring.More bluntly they don`t think about what they do, just act according to their neurological program, so do we autistics. It is like there is a computer program who responds a certain way and we want to change that by punishing the computer with a nice slap on the screen when it says something undesirable, or giving it a cake when it says something desirable, it is a clearly futile action. Just like a program can only be changed by changing the program, take the processor out and put a different program in it. As we are not computers, our processor = our brain cannot be taken out and changed which means our program cannot be changed!!!!!! :) The right approach is treat autism like a different language, as we autistics are very intelligent but we communicate on a different language!
I agree with your last sentence that autistic people have own language I do not agree that non autistic people can't teach autistic people.
@@jerzygrudka1962 I think they mean HOW they teach them. ABA is rooted in teaching autistics to "act normal", which most people who go through it just end up masking or being traumatized by it.
What about the severely autistic kid who communicates by gouging his eyes and slamming his head into walls?
@@IcanSeeMyselfOutThanks they might have other disorders or might be unhappy. Its not easy being autistic in a world that hates you
@@mostrandomthings3797 I don't think everyone hates autistic people as you said. I just think most people don't understand. In this time and age though, autism awareness is increasing
Rushing never helps in learning.
You should be brought up on potential criminal charges for an egrgeious display with respect to not an infintesimal notion of what constitutes childhood mental health in your painful and stunning presentation of anti-therapeutic and ant-developmental practices.
Heyyyy, floor play guy! How's your non-empirically backed, pseudoscientific waste of time and resources going?
I agree
same here@@Xx_Sleep_Paralysis_Demon_xX