Update 3/14/2022: I was told of a schedule change but didn’t realize it starts today. As a result, I’m no longer seeing the non-verbal kid in class. But please keep posting suggestions on how to communicate with non-verbal autistics. I’m still seeing the kid who did beads (mentioned on #12 and #14) in art class, but not TAing the class where he was told to do the beads. Currently I’m experiencing something NTs call “brain fry.” Speaking for myself, it happens when I receive too much information without enough time to process it, and I feel my brain working slower than usual and just really tired in general. Also observing ABA for 3 sessions a day is taking up a lot of my mental energy, some things are super sad. I’ll still try to read everyone’s posts but no guarantee. I probably can’t send very detailed replies. But I’ll catch up eventually.
Short version of my story. I graduated from college last year with basic knowledge of psychology and autism, but have never interacted with autistics before. I got a job teaching autistic children this January and my job training requires ABA. Most of the kids here are ASD-2 and ASD-3. I did not realize ABA is hurtful at first, but now I want to help the autistic children feel better. I’ll be teaching art and doing sandplay therapy after I finish my training (currently TAing art), so I can get away with not doing ABA. I’m currently not in the West as defined by geography and the culture. Ableism is very prevalent here.
List of things I need help with (some already have good answers but still included so I can get a variety of perspectives):
During ABA training I was told to exaggerate the tone of my voice, my voice itself, and facial expressions when I compliment the kids to get their attention. Does this work for autistics? Per my research on autism, this seems like it’s not going to work. I know this works for NT children.
There is a non-verbal kid here who’s receptive to hand signals. Ways to communicate with him?
Sometimes we have the kids do tasks, but I don't know if it effectively measures IQ for autistics. For example, we ask them to color in a picture, and many would color in patches and not confine the colors in lines. Some kids have difficulties stringing beads in a specific pattern (e.g. red, blue, green, repeat). Not sure if that's just autistic brains being different or really IQ, please comment.
A kid was told to string beads in red, blue, green order (mentioned on #12 and #14). He often starts with red blue green, but then end up stringing a lot of green beads or blue beads. In art, he tends to color the same section over and over until there’s a hole in the paper. Is he stimming? Other possibilities why this is happening? In my original reply I said he has good language skills, but after talking to him again, some of his language seems trained and verbal communication seems hard for him. He said he likes art.
A kid is labeled as “aggressive,” which I don’t agree with, but some days I struggle to communicate with him. Please comment on what you think might be going on. He's 8. He is verbal but from an NT perspective he seems distracted when he's speaking, is that a sign he's struggling with this method of communication? He understands writing. In class he's really excited when he's holding/playing with markers, but if we tell him to draw something, he stares at the paper with a frown and makes a mark or two and stops. If another child is drawing something, he copies their drawing, so a lot of his work look like replicas of someone else's. He does not copy drawings that are already drawn, nor does he copy another adult.
One time during art, me and the main teacher put a set of markers and one playdoh in a white box in front of each kid. Once he got up and took another kid's markers and started running around the classroom with it. Another time he went through three boxes grabbing playdohs when other kids were seated in close approximity to the boxes, and because there were things (4-5 pieces of paper and a roll of tape) on top of the playdoh, everything ended up being thrown on the floor. It seemed like he didn’t do it intentionally but couldn't control himself. Next time this happens, what can I do to calm him down quickly so he's not hurting anyone or taking other kids' stuff? He has a really rough time in ABA, and he always needs a box of his markers in sight. During ABA, sometimes he shoots up from his seat to get the markers.
Some of the kids here really do act NT now, should I encourage some autistic behaviors to them? But they are not doing it anymore, so how should I encourage it? Also I need to be discreet so no one notices me promoting these bahaviors or notices them doing it.
When an autistic person is stimming, is it ethical to stop them? Some of the kids here stims quietly, not bothering anyone, but I was told to stop them because it would interfere with their tasks (they are not doing their tasks when stimming). The tasks are for helping with intellectual disability because a lot of the kids here are comorbid. I'm assuming having kids do these tasks is okay? Tasks include putting together building blocks, stringing colored beads in order, and coloring a picture.
Are they aware of their surroundings when stimming? Some kids don't pay attention to me at all when they are stimming, be it voice, writing, or hand signals. What's the best way to communicate to them when they are like this?