Lining up toys would be called a scheme (or Schema). These were first highlighted by a theorist called Piaget. They're a common repeated play behaviour that most children will engage in at some point in their lives. There are approximately 24 schemes (Athey). Rotation, transporting, throwing (trajectory) are all common examples. They demonstrate that a child is trying to make sense of the world around them, construct knowledge etc. As children develop they begin to bring together their simple scheme into more complex operations, e.g. a child who is interested in lining objects up may progress to measuring (using a long tape measure). It's a pre-requisite. See Piaget, Chris Athey, Cathy Nutbrown. The feet - as we have so many nerves in our feet it can be overstimulating to walk with flat feet:(
Thank you! This is the first time I have stumbled onto one of your videos.. spot on! As a grandmother of two autistic grandchildren that live with me I find your explanations clear and very helpful. Keep up the good work.. and I will check out your website.
Your channel is one of my favorites as I'm preparing for my first baby in a couple weeks! All the children around me are speech delayed so it's something I'm conscientious of. I don't know if it's because they all are in bilingual households, but it was only recently when I interacted with other children who were of similar age but better spoken that I realized how delayed they are. Literally, both my nephew (5) and niece (4), my fiance's nephew (2), and my coworkers' children (8 and 2 respectively). And I recognize signs of autism in a few of them that have been diagnosed but the parents are in denial of. Thankfully my nephew has gotten much better in his speech after going to preschool and kindergarten, but the teachers comment on how they adore his "baby talk" as he's the only one who speaks like that. I'm a bit worried that the trend will continue with my daughter but trying to educate myself early.
What ASD children need the most is respect and patience. Only if we as parents spend time with the child, join what he is playing, introduce new ways and make the play fun, eventually will we get there, first be with him and then bring him back to the human world.
Thanks for this. My son is 2 years old and he’s mildly autistic. He always lines stuff up and gets upset when I mess it up. 😂 He does a lot of things repetitively. I guess it’s soothing for him, I’m not sure.
I have a question it’s been in the back of mind for a year now, we have tile in our living room and my son lines up his cars or books or sticks or crayons or just sometimes any toys, not often but maybe three times a week over the grout lines of the floor and I have always wonder why he does this?
My 2 year old daughter takes finger foods(like dino nuggets)one by one, dips them in sauce, takes a bite, then puts it on the table in a row and repeats until there's no more nuggets.
My 16 mo old started lining up objects not necessarily toys. His fav are water bottles that he specifically lines up. If I help him out it in line he’ll be happy to do it with me but when I would mess it up he be upset. I pretend play w him w his doll and he hugs dolls and copies me when I fake feed baby. What do you think?
You are very wrong. Are you Autiatic youraelf ? Or is this just a guess form the outside looking in ? I'm Autistic. We line up toys because we are making Autistic categories of things. That's why. This is how Autistic people learn to maker categories. We don't categorize things the same way as Neurotypicals.
Hi Ming I am about to purchase your course. I just want to know ......my son was said to be delayed in his expressive language and auditory comprehension. Will your course be helpful for this kind of diagnosis, we are waiting to get a psychological evaluation to see if he is autistic.
►► Learn how to teach your child from no words to sentences and beyond: www.agentsofspeech.com/course
Lining up toys would be called a scheme (or Schema). These were first highlighted by a theorist called Piaget. They're a common repeated play behaviour that most children will engage in at some point in their lives. There are approximately 24 schemes (Athey). Rotation, transporting, throwing (trajectory) are all common examples. They demonstrate that a child is trying to make sense of the world around them, construct knowledge etc. As children develop they begin to bring together their simple scheme into more complex operations, e.g. a child who is interested in lining objects up may progress to measuring (using a long tape measure). It's a pre-requisite.
See Piaget, Chris Athey, Cathy Nutbrown.
The feet - as we have so many nerves in our feet it can be overstimulating to walk with flat feet:(
Thank you for providing context to this activity. It creates anxiety but is not looked at logically the way you explained it.
I appreciate how logical and sensible you are.
thanks
Thank you! This is the first time I have stumbled onto one of your videos.. spot on!
As a grandmother of two autistic grandchildren that live with me I find your explanations clear and very helpful. Keep up the good work.. and I will check out your website.
thanks. =D
Your channel is one of my favorites as I'm preparing for my first baby in a couple weeks! All the children around me are speech delayed so it's something I'm conscientious of. I don't know if it's because they all are in bilingual households, but it was only recently when I interacted with other children who were of similar age but better spoken that I realized how delayed they are. Literally, both my nephew (5) and niece (4), my fiance's nephew (2), and my coworkers' children (8 and 2 respectively). And I recognize signs of autism in a few of them that have been diagnosed but the parents are in denial of. Thankfully my nephew has gotten much better in his speech after going to preschool and kindergarten, but the teachers comment on how they adore his "baby talk" as he's the only one who speaks like that. I'm a bit worried that the trend will continue with my daughter but trying to educate myself early.
Relax and take it easy, thanks for supporting though
What ASD children need the most is respect and patience. Only if we as parents spend time with the child, join what he is playing, introduce new ways and make the play fun, eventually will we get there, first be with him and then bring him back to the human world.
totally right!
Thanks for this. My son is 2 years old and he’s mildly autistic. He always lines stuff up and gets upset when I mess it up. 😂 He does a lot of things repetitively. I guess it’s soothing for him, I’m not sure.
I have a question it’s been in the back of mind for a year now, we have tile in our living room and my son lines up his cars or books or sticks or crayons or just sometimes any toys, not often but maybe three times a week over the grout lines of the floor and I have always wonder why he does this?
My 6 yr old boy does that too. Lines up his candies and toys
yes totally right my son use to be but al hamdoulillah not anymore
how he is improved
My 2 year old daughter takes finger foods(like dino nuggets)one by one, dips them in sauce, takes a bite, then puts it on the table in a row and repeats until there's no more nuggets.
What if child lines up everything not only toys?
www.agentsofspeech.com/course
My 16 mo old started lining up objects not necessarily toys. His fav are water bottles that he specifically lines up. If I help him out it in line he’ll be happy to do it with me but when I would mess it up he be upset. I pretend play w him w his doll and he hugs dolls and copies me when I fake feed baby. What do you think?
Sounds ok to me so far
@@AgentsofSpeech thank you for your reply!
You are very wrong. Are you Autiatic youraelf ? Or is this just a guess form the outside looking in ? I'm Autistic. We line up toys because we are making Autistic categories of things. That's why. This is how Autistic people learn to maker categories. We don't categorize things the same way as Neurotypicals.
Hi Ming I am about to purchase your course. I just want to know ......my son was said to be delayed in his expressive language and auditory comprehension.
Will your course be helpful for this kind of diagnosis, we are waiting to get a psychological evaluation to see if he is autistic.
if your child doesn't use words consistently, I would recommend you check out our micro-course first! that should help =D