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Including Kids, Inc. provides educational and therapeutic instruction
using the principles of Applied Behavior Analysis for children with autism
and other related developmental delays endeavoring to facilitate their
inclusion in the community and inspire them to become productive citizens.
About Autism
Autism is a complex developmental disability that typically appears
during the first three years of life and is the result of a neurological
disorder that affects the normal functioning of the brain impacting development
in the areas of social interaction and communication. Based on the prevailing
statistics from the National Institutes of Health, 2004 and the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention, 2005 - autism affects 1 out of 150
children, and according to U. S. Dept. of Education, is the fastest-
growing developmental disability.
Children with autism typically show difficulties in verbal/non-verbal
communication, social interactions, and leisure/play activities making
it extremely hard for a child with autism to fit into a typical classroom
setting. This is why early intervention is so crucial. It could mean
the difference between a child growing up to be an independent member
of society versus the possibility of being placed into a group home or
institutional setting away from their family. Including Kids, Inc. provides
children with autism one-to-one therapeutic program based on the well-documented
effectiveness of ABA-based intervention. This type of intervention focuses
on successfully providing help to families who need to facilitate their
child's inclusion into a mainstream classroom and
community setting.
The kinds of deficits and excesses that may challenge a person with
autism are:
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Communication - they
may have little or no expressive (spoken) or receptive (understood) language,
they may be echolalic (repeating words or phrases), or even have a peculiar
way to speak (they might get fixed on a particular topic area, or their
pitch or tone may sound odd).
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Social Skills - they
may avoid social contact altogether, or they may be awkward and
unsure of how to interact. Social rules can seem very arbitrary,
complex, and perplexing.
- Play Skills - left
on their own, they may not play with or experience
toys in the same way a typically developing child would. They may
become obsessed with a particular toy or object and perseverate
with it (repeatedly do the same thing).
- Visual and Auditory Processing - these
senses may be very under-reactive, having little or no response
to visual or auditory cues, or they may be overly sensitive to a
barrage of sights and sounds and find them overwhelming.
- Self Stimulation - they
may engage in 'self-stimulator' behavior
which can be soothing and predictable for them. This could involve
the entire body, by rocking, hand flapping, spinning in circles,
etc., using toys in unusual or inappropriate ways, or having obsessions,
such as needing people or objects to be in the same place, or needing
events to follow a predictable pattern.
about ABA
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