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Asperger Syndrome Unraveled: Applied Strategies for Successful Integration into Campus Life Presented by: Louise Bedrossian, Ed.S, LPC and Rodney Pennamon, M.Ed. Georgia State University © Louise E. Bedrossian and Rodney E. Pennamon, 2007. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced without permission.
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Nov 12, 2014

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Workshop presentation on working with college students with Aspergers syndrome
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  • 1. Asperger Syndrome Unraveled: Applied Strategies for Successful Integration into Campus Life Presented by: Louise Bedrossian, Ed.S, LPC and Rodney Pennamon, M.Ed. Georgia State University Louise E. Bedrossian and Rodney E. Pennamon, 2007. All rights reserved. May not be reproduced without permission.
  • 2. What is Asperger Syndrome?
    • Named for a Viennese psychiatrist, Hans Asperger
    • Published a paper in 1944 describing a pattern of behaviors and abilities primarily in boys.
    • Leo Kanner, an Austrian psychiatrist in his 1943 paper, also focusing on children noted the three basic characteristics that today are recognized as defining autism .
    • These include social difficulties, communication problems and repetitive and restricted activities .
  • 3. What is Asperger Syndrome?
    • In 1981 Lorna Wing, a British autism expert , published a paper bringing to the forefront the work of Hans Asperger and Leo Kanner .
    • In the work of Wing and Gould they refer to these characteristics described by Kanner as the triad of impairments.
    • 1990s diagnostic criteria for AS were included in the DSM-IV and the ICD10. The following impairments were listed: social interaction, social communication, social imagination and absence of general delay in language development
  • 4. What is Asperger Syndrome?
    • The DSM-IV-TR lists the following characteristics as indicative of impairment in social interaction for AS, specifying that at least two must be present:
    • Marked impairment in the use of multiple nonverbal behaviors such as eye-to-eye gaze, facial expression, body postures, and gestures to regulate social interaction
    • Failure to develop peer relationships appropriate to developmental level
    • A lack of spontaneous seeking to share enjoyment, interests, or achievements with other people (e.g., by a lack of showing, bringing, or pointing out objects of interest to other people)
  • 5. What is Asperger Syndrome?
    • Lack of social or emotional reciprocity
    • Other associated features may include motor clumsiness and awkward movements, as well as inattention
    • BUT
    • What do these students really look like when they are standing in front of us?
    • Can we recognize the student who is likely to have such a disorder?
  • 6. What is Asperger Syndrome?
    • HAVE YOU MET THIS STUDENT?
    • Often does not understand non-verbal/social cues
    • Avoids eye contact
    • Flat affect
    • Poor reciprocal conversational skill
    • Prosody is unusual
    • Sensory sensitivity/sensory integration problems
    • Unusual awkward gait
  • 7. What is Asperger Syndrome?
    • People who are loners
    • Concrete thinking
    • Verbose on focused issues
    • Central coherence difficulties
  • 8. Inside the Asperger Mind
    • People with AS perceive the world differently.
    • Temple Grandin : an anthropologist on Mars. thinking in pictures; Words are like a second language to me. sensory based language put into memory
    • Bob Morris :AS see things with six degrees of freedom; getting into a machine and swimming in it.
    • Therese Joliffe : on a planet with alien creatures
  • 9. What it Looks Like from the Outside
    • Theory of Mind: Inability to understand others plans, thoughts and points of view
    • Communication: Problems with language pragmatics, voice inflection & modulation (receptive & expressive)
    • Literal Thinking: Do not grasp abstract language or idiomatic expressions.
    • Unexpected Change: difficulty making sense of changes & adjusting. Order and predictability highly preferred.
  • 10. What it Looks Like from the Outside
    • Sensory Sensitivity:
      • Often respond with more slowly and with greater sensitivity to sensory stimuli;
      • Difficult for the individual with AS to absorb and process these constant changes
    • Preoccupation with a Subject:
      • May focus on it to the exclusion of other activities;
      • Often unaware of others losing interest in their discussion of this passion
  • 11. Commonly Co-Morbid Disorders and Initial Diagnoses
    • Depression -Affects about one in fifteen people with AS
    • Anxiety -Affects 84.1 percent of children with PDD and continues into adulthood
    • Obsessive-compulsive disorder- Third commonly occurring mental health problem among those with Asperger syndrome;
      • 8% of children with AS, and continues to adulthood
    • Eating disorders- Focus on rules and perfectionism with misunderstanding of usage may contribute to incidence
  • 12. Accommodations and Strategies
    • Common Functional Limitations
    • Sensory sensitivity
    • Difficulties in understanding social interactions
    • Problems with both expressive and receptive communication
    • Slower processing of auditory information
    • Difficulties with comprehending cognitive information, including very literal interpretations, and difficulties with understanding main or overriding concepts.
    • Tendency to become fixated on details
    • Inflexible thinking tendencies and patterns
    • Inefficient ability to regulate emotions
    • Trouble with organizational tasks
    • Poor motor coordination
  • 13. Accommodations and Strategies
    • Testing Accommodations:
    • Extended testing time
    • Testing in a distraction-reduced environment
    • Use of a computer with word processing software, especially for essay tests and those that require extensive writing.
    • Use of organizational software such as Inspiration for writing and organizing ideas
    • Use of noise reducing devices such as white noise machines, head phones and earplugs
  • 14. Accommodations and Strategies
    • Classroom Accommodations:
    • Use of audio recorders
    • Use of a volunteer note-taker
    • Access to PowerPoint presentations or instructors notes (preferably in advance, if available)
    • Priority registration
    • Behavioral contracts/guidance (not code of conduct issues)
    • Priority seating (if needed)
  • 15. Accommodations and Strategies
    • Other Accommodations:
    • Single/private dormitory room
    • Assistance of dormitory personnel in case of an emergency situation, should a student become immobilized or unusually agitated and unable to respond, evacuate, etc.
  • 16. Accommodations and Strategies
    • Common Strategies :
    • A list of activities and specific limited choices
    • Clear instructions (i.e. routines, calming down)
    • Behavioral rules
    • Written guidelines
    • Task checklists
    • Task instruction cards (i.e. what you will need, donts, steps)
    • Reminders
    • Interpersonal communication advice (i.e. what to say, how to ask for help)
    • Explanations and key elements of common social situations
    • Organizational methods (i.e. schedules, wall calendars, notebooks)-
    • A Resource notebook (i.e. financial, housing, leisure options, who to call if)
    • Advance training and job preparation (i.e. internships, part-time? employment)
  • 17. Accommodations and Strategies
    • Common Strategies (Continued):
    • Explanations and key elements of common social situations
    • Organizational methods (i.e. schedules, wall calendars, notebooks)-
    • A Resource notebook (i.e. financial, housing, leisure options, who to call if)
    • Advance training and job preparation (i.e. internships, part-time? employment)
    • Develop a Student Success Plan
    • (Sample template available in upcoming publication:
    • College Students with Asperger Syndrome: Practical Strategies for Academic and Social Success , LRP Publications)
  • 18. Successful Internships
    • Previous general work experience helps prepare
    • Explore the workplace environment beforehand for stimuli that are noxious to the student
    • Clear job description, list of duties and expectations in advance is critical
    • Determine needed modifications and accommodations
    • Institution-sponsored worksites offer opportunity for educating employer about AS, and other interventions
    • Student must be otherwise qualified and meet all technical standards
  • 19. Coping with the Unexpected, Changes and the Adverse
    • More disturbing for a longer period to those with AS
    • Students need a plan for coping with unexpected changes such as:
      • The test does not arrive at the alternate testing location
      • The expected professor is not teaching the course
      • The students car breaks down on the way to campus for class
      • There is suddenly a new roommate
      • Road construction closes the usual route to school or work
      • There is a new disability service provider
  • 20. Coping with the Unexpected, Changes and the Adverse
    • Students need a plan for coping with noxious stimuli or sensory overload such as :
      • Visual : Florescent lighting, crowds, heavy traffic, flashing lights/signs
      • Auditory: Fast-paced speech, certain music, construction noise or emergency vehicle sirens
      • Smells/Tastes: food odors, chemicals in labs, fragrances,, toothpaste, cleaning product or pesticide odors, smoke, city air pollution
      • Tactile: Food textures, clothing, touching objects, solutions or other substances, being touched
  • 21. Coping with the Unexpected, Changes and the Adverse
    • Calming Routines
    • Rocking, Spinning, Pacing
    • Rubbing skin or clothing
    • Sitting in a warm bath, or hot tub, especially one with circulating water
    • Eating/chewing a favorite food, or just eating in general
    • Watching something peaceful or monotonous (fireplace, fish tank, etc.)
    • Listening to favorite music
    • Students should be helped to develop a Disability Management Plan
    • (Detailed discussion in: College Students with Asperger Syndrome: Practical Strategies for Academic and Social Success , LRP Publications)
  • 22. Coping with the Unexpected, Changes and the Adverse
    • Finding Sanctuary in Times of Stress
    • Ending a conversation that is unpleasant or beginning to escalate into aggression
    • Learning and practicing deep breathing techniques
    • Learning and practicing deep muscle relaxation
    • Using mental imagery that is calming
    • Repeating affirmations or a favorite line or phrase from music or literature
    • Getting to a predetermined private place, such as the students room or disability services office, where other calming and satisfying behaviors can be performed
    • Creating a calming daily routine on which to focus during unavoidable stressful situations that are routine
  • 23. Communication and Social Interaction
    • Problems with communication and social interaction
    • Marked impairment in the use of multiple nonverbal behaviors
    • Failure to develop appropriate peer relationships
    • A lack of spontaneous seeking to share
    • Lack of social or emotional reciprocity
    • Difficulty with Theory of Mind
    • YET
    • 75 to over 90 percent of communication is non-verbal
    • Some say these skills can be taught
  • 24. Communication and Social Interaction
    • Building Social Skills and Connections
    • Social Rules- concrete examples that demonstrate rules
      • Build a bank of rules and discuss transferability to other situations
    • Social Stories -describe a social situation in a systematic fashion
      • Descriptive - describe a situation or event
      • Directive - describes how the reader should act in a situation
    • Learning to read and non-verbal language though training programs such as those in books by Baron-Cohen (Mind Reading) & Ekman (Emotions Revealed)
  • 25. Communication and Social Interaction
    • Finding a Social Group
    • Radio
    • Film and video
    • Robots
    • Computer gaming
    • Fantasy
    • Pets and animals
    • Computer generated or other music
    • Trains or other mechanical interests
    • Other computer applications
    • Alternative for Social Interaction Practice:
    • SecondLife.com
  • 26. Organizational Skills and Asperger Syndrome
    • Because of neurodevelopmental deficits, planning, organization, initiation and execution of goals are lacking for the student with Asperger syndrome.
    • The student with AS might be clueless on how to begin a task, such as writing a paper, that requires multiple steps.
    • Another common problem is committing to do too much, which can lead to unnecessary stress.
  • 27. Organizational Skills and Asperger Syndrome
    • Overall role for the provider and goal for the student should be development of self-management skills.
    • Developing methods for the student to self-reinforce positive behavior, as well as to understand the purpose or reason for the behavior or task, increases probability of success for the student with AS.
  • 28. Organizational Skills and Asperger Syndrome
    • Identifying the problem is the first step, followed by implementing useful techniques that the student can utilize long after they have left the college campus.
    • The disability service provider may wish to spend time exploring the problems the student is having and develop effective solutions.
  • 29. Organizational Skills and Asperger Syndrome
    • Schedules
    • Calendars
    • Action steps
    • To Do/Task Lists
    • Visual Reminders
    • Setting manageable goals
    • Time table
    • Resources
  • 30. Service Providers and Students with Asperger Syndrome
    • Student needs are complex and multifaceted
    • Preparing in advance will save time, effort and problems for service provider
    • Student and support system personnel must take much responsibility
    • Students use of a self-prepared Resource Book can be effective strategy
    • Use of other campus resources is efficient and aids student success, retention, and graduation rates
  • 31. Asperger Syndrome Unraveled: Applied Strategies for Successful Integration into Campus Life
    • References
    • Baron-Cohen, S., Mind Reading (2003), Jessica Kingsley Press, London and New York.
    • Baron-Cohen, S., DVD-ROM, Mind Reading: An Interactive Guide to Emotions, (2003) Jessica Kingsley, Ltd., London
    • Ekman, P., Emotions Revealed: Recognizing Faces and Feelings to Improve Communication and Emotions Life, (2003) Time Books, New York
    • Grandin, T., Thinking in Pictures, Doubleday, New York, 1995 and, Vintage Books, New York, 2006
  • 32. Asperger Syndrome Unraveled: Applied Strategies for Successful Integration into Campus Life
    • References (Cont.)
    • Gross, T., Temple Grandin: A Key to Animal Behavior, on Fresh Air , National Public Radio , on the web at
    • http://wwwnpr.org/templates/story/story/php?storyId=4278538&sc=emaf , January 11, 2005
    • Joliffe, T., Lansdown, R. and Robinson T. (1992) Autism: A Personal Account. National autistic Society, London
    • Sacks, O., Neurologists notebook: An anthropologist on Mars, New Yorker, and December 27, 1993
  • 33. Asperger Syndrome Unraveled: Applied Strategies for Successful Integration into Campus Life
    • General Resources
    • The Complete Guide to Aspergers Syndrome by Tony Attwood (2006)
    • Succeeding in College with Asperger Syndrome by John Harpur, Maria Lawlor, and Michael Fitzgerald (2004)
    • The Unwritten Rules of Social Relationships by Temple Grandin and Sean Barron (2005)
    • Pretending to be Normal: Living with Aspergers Syndrome by Liane Holliday Willey and Tony Attwood (1999)
  • 34. Asperger Syndrome Unraveled: Applied Strategies for Successful Integration into Campus Life
    • Websites
    • Autism Society of America- www.autism-society.org
    • Autism Speaks- www.autismspeaks.org
    • HEATH Resource Center- www.heath.gwu.edu
    • National Autism Association- www.nationalautismassociation.org
    • National autism Society, (UK) Glossary of Terms-www.nas.org.uk/nas/jsp/polopoly.isp?d=666
    • OASIS (Online Asperger Syndrome Information and Support)- www.udel.edu/bkirby/asperger
    • University Students with Autism and Asperger Syndrome- www.cns.dircon.co.uk/index.html