dir®/floortime™ sharon duval, m.a., ccc/slp the monarch school autism one 2008 conference

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DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School www.monarchschool.org Autism One 2008 Conference

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Page 1: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

DIR®/Floortime™

Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP

The Monarch School

www.monarchschool.org

Autism One 2008 Conference

Page 2: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

DIR® is the Developmental Individualized Relationship Approach developed by Stanley Greenspan, M.D. and Serena Wieder, Ph.D.

Page 3: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

It is a developmental approach that engages a child at his/her current level of functioning, works with the unique features of their nervous system and utilizes intensive interaction experiences to enable them to master new

capacities.

Page 4: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

• In the last 10-20 years,The Interdisciplinary Council on Developmental and Learning Disorders put together what they call a functional developmental roadmap that reflects their understanding of the core levels that synthesize and integrate all of the developmental capacities. www.icdl.com

•“D” REPRESENTS FUNCTIONAL DEVELOPMENTAL LEVELS

Page 5: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

“I” REPRESENTS INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES IN

PROCESSING

Page 6: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

“R” REPRESENTS INTERACTIVE RELATIONSHIPS AND USE OF

AFFECTS

Page 7: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

6 Core Functional Developmental Levels

• 1) Regulation and shared attention

• 2) Engagement

• 3) Two-way communication

• 4) Interactive problem solving

• 5) Functional use of ideas

• 6) Building bridges between ideas

Page 8: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

• Children are individually different in the way they process information.

•Variations exist in underlying motor and sensory processing, i.e. regulatory capacities.

•These are the important underlying processing capacities that are behind children’s worrisome behaviors such as self/absorbed/withdrawn, self -stimulation/repetitive movement, rigidity, inflexibility, difficulty making transitions, aggression, self-abuse, destructive behaviors.

Page 9: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Studies have documented that interactive experiences can actually change the physical

structure of the brain.

Page 10: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Affect, emotions and relationships are important for the

growth of the brain and mind.

Page 11: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

The mind and brain grow most rapidly as an outgrowth of interactive experiences.

Page 12: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

After 20 years of studying large numbers of children and their families, the fundamental

types of interactive experiences were identified that are most

critical for healthy development.

Page 13: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

CRITICAL FEATURES OF THESE INTERACTIONS

•Interactions which feature warmth and security•Interactions which feature regulation so that the child is not overwhelmed•Interactions which feature a lot of relatedness and engagement•Interactions which feature a lot of back and forth emotional signaling and gesturing•Interactions which feature problem solving•Interactions which feature using ideas in a meaningful and functional way•Interaction which require thinking and reasoning

Page 14: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Most essential are lots and lots of interactions with children that

exchange emotions and have to do with the fundamental sense of

relatedness.

Page 15: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

• Language, cognition (including math and quantity concepts), as well as emotional and social skills are learned through interactive relationships which involve affective exchanges.

• Without fundamental relating, language and cognition do not develop well.

Page 16: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Affective Exchanges• A child can control and regulate emotions and

facial expressions that convey emotions much earlier than they can control motor behavior

• Emotions lead the way all the way through• Emotions activate the motor system• Emotions are the organizer for all parts of the

mind.• They are especially important when we get to abstract thinking.

Page 17: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Two levels for Child to learn emotional concepts

• Lived emotional experience

• Must live every word first to understand it.

Page 18: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

A Relationship-based approach to children with special needs

that is family, cultural and community based.

Page 19: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Relationships and emotional interactions occur within

• Child/caregiver

• Child/educator

• Child/therapist

• Whole family pattern

• Cultural and community contacts

Page 20: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

The DIR® Approach enables caregivers, educator and therapist to construct a

comprehensive program to mobilize each child’s intellectual

and emotional growth.

Page 21: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

DIR® Comprehensive Program includes:

• A model for assessment

• A model for intervention

Page 22: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

DIR® MODEL OF ASSESSMENT

• Begins with a review of a child’s current functioning, history and observations of the child with caregivers.

• The best assessments take place over a period of time rather than in the space of a single day.

Page 23: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

OBERVATIONS OF CHILD WITH CAREGIVER INCLUDE

• Looking at biological challenges – individual processing differences and motor profile.

• Identifying individual differences in each child’s strengths and weaknesses.

• Looking at the way child relates to caregivers and the way his/her caregivers relate to him – patterns of interaction.

• Observing the use of language, cognitive capacities and overall health.

• Observing where the child is in Functional Developmental Levels. • We observe the ways in which his profile influences his interactions

with caregivers and ways in which caregiver patterns influence his developmental progress.

Page 24: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Parent/child interactions reveal the child’s capacity for relating and interacting and may the venue in which the child is

most likely to perform at his highest level.

Page 25: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Standardized Tests

• If needed, standardized tests are used after the child is observed interacting and playing with caregivers.

Page 26: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

DIR® MODEL OF INTERVENTION

• Construct a child’s unique profile which includes his functional abilities.

Page 27: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Child’s Individual Profile includes:

• Identifying unique processing differences in terms of how the child reacts to sensations, processes information, plans actions, and sequences behavior and thoughts.

• Level of functional emotional, social, and intellectual capacities

• Typical and necessary interaction patterns• Family patterns.

Page 28: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

The profile enables parents and professionals to construct an

intervention plan geared to each child’s individual characteristics.

Page 29: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Comprehensive Functional Developmental Intervention

Program

• Specific Therapies

• Home program

• School program

• Family support

• Medical Intervention

Page 30: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Home Program

• Spontaneous developmentally appropriate interactions (Floortime™)

• Semi-structured problem solving interactions

• Motor, sensory, and visual/spatial activities.

Page 31: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

CONNECTED CHOICE ACTIVITIES:

         Play a Board Game

         Puzzles with Someone

         Make or Build Something with Someone

SOLO CHOICE ACTIVITIES:

         Build something with Legos

         Build a model

         Read a book on a favorite topic

        Play an approved computer game

 MOVEMENT CHOICES:

         Play with neighborhood kids

         Jump on trampoline

         Play actively with dog

         Play creatively and actively outside

         Swim

         Play basketball

         Ride bike

         Skate

Page 32: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

School Program

• Class Structure

• Spontaneous developmentally appropriate interactions (Floortime™)

• Semi-structured problem-solving interactions

• Motor, sensory, and visual/spatial activities.

Page 33: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

FLOORTIME™

Page 34: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

Intervention Strategies to Develop Mutual attention and Engagement

• Follow child’s lead and join them – it does not matter what they do as long as they initiate the move

• Persist in your pursuit

• Treat what the child does as intentional and purposeful – give new meanings

• Help child do what they want to do

• Position yourself in front of the child

Page 35: DIR®/Floortime™ Sharon Duval, M.A., CCC/SLP The Monarch School  Autism One 2008 Conference

• Invest in whatever they initiate or imitate

• Join perseverative play

• Do not treat avoidance or “no” as rejection

• Expand, expand, expand – keep going, play dumb, do wrong move, do as told, interfere, etc.

• Do not interrupt or change the subject as long as it is interactive

• Insist on a response