Luv Bunnies
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Sep 3, 2006
- Messages
- 9,098
I'm sure some of you are experts with PECS so I thought I'd ask a question about it here.
I'm in my 7th year as an aide in a special ed preschool class. Our kids are considered mild-moderate. We have one little boy who has been diagnosed with autism and possible mental retardation (the report said it's possible but they couldn't get enough information during test so it's not diagnosed yet). He really should be in the class next door that's set up for more severely autistic kids but that class is full so we have him (our public school system at it's finest!). This boy can talk when he wants to. He can use one and sometimes two word utterances. But he's very stubborn and often choose not to talk. The teacher models words for him that he will repeat if he's in the mood. Other times, he will just look away or cover his face. When he really wants something, he will point and say the word like car, block, cookie, etc. His mom reports that he talks frequently at home but she would like to see much more language development.
The psychologist decided this child needs a PECS binder to communicate. She wants us to start using it at snack time and have him point to the picture of the item he wants (like cookie, cracker or drink). What's getting me confused is that he has the actual items right in front of him. If he brings crackers and a drink, we would put both in front of him and say, "What do you want?" We would hold off on giving it to him until he said, "Crackers." Then, before getting the cup, he would have to say, "Drink." The psychologist wants us to do the same thing but have him point to the picture and say the word. Why would you have a child point to a picture when the actual item is sitting right in front of him? Isn't it more functional for him to point to a real object and say the name?
I understand using a PECS binder for a child who can't talk at all. It would help them to communicate by pointing to a picture of what they want, how they're feeling, etc. But for a child who can talk, why would you want him to learn to rely on pointing to pictures? And why would he point to a picture of a cookie when he can point to the real thing? Is the psychologist having us use the system in the wrong manner for this child? I don't have a lot of experience with PECS so I want to make sure we're using it correctly and for the right reasons. Thanks for any help on this!
I'm in my 7th year as an aide in a special ed preschool class. Our kids are considered mild-moderate. We have one little boy who has been diagnosed with autism and possible mental retardation (the report said it's possible but they couldn't get enough information during test so it's not diagnosed yet). He really should be in the class next door that's set up for more severely autistic kids but that class is full so we have him (our public school system at it's finest!). This boy can talk when he wants to. He can use one and sometimes two word utterances. But he's very stubborn and often choose not to talk. The teacher models words for him that he will repeat if he's in the mood. Other times, he will just look away or cover his face. When he really wants something, he will point and say the word like car, block, cookie, etc. His mom reports that he talks frequently at home but she would like to see much more language development.
The psychologist decided this child needs a PECS binder to communicate. She wants us to start using it at snack time and have him point to the picture of the item he wants (like cookie, cracker or drink). What's getting me confused is that he has the actual items right in front of him. If he brings crackers and a drink, we would put both in front of him and say, "What do you want?" We would hold off on giving it to him until he said, "Crackers." Then, before getting the cup, he would have to say, "Drink." The psychologist wants us to do the same thing but have him point to the picture and say the word. Why would you have a child point to a picture when the actual item is sitting right in front of him? Isn't it more functional for him to point to a real object and say the name?
I understand using a PECS binder for a child who can't talk at all. It would help them to communicate by pointing to a picture of what they want, how they're feeling, etc. But for a child who can talk, why would you want him to learn to rely on pointing to pictures? And why would he point to a picture of a cookie when he can point to the real thing? Is the psychologist having us use the system in the wrong manner for this child? I don't have a lot of experience with PECS so I want to make sure we're using it correctly and for the right reasons. Thanks for any help on this!
