Transcript Slide 1
Don’t Leave Us Out!
Listening to Children with
Multiple and Profound
Disabilities
Nick Pike
Principal Lecturer in Social Work
Faculty of Sport, Health and Social Care
University of Gloucestershire
Why is listening to profoundly
disabled children difficult?
► Discrimination:
profoundly disabled children are
assumed to be incapable of communicating or
having nothing important to say
► Adult control and surveillance: leads to domination
of child, limitation of choice and taught
helplessness
► Difficulty: it can be time consuming, challenging
and difficult to listen to, understand and respond
to a child with little or no verbal communication
Communication Sin Bin
Foundation Principles for Social Work
Practice
Children are motivated to communicate to control their
world
► Children are ACTIVE participants in learning about the
world around them
► All behaviour is potentially meaningful or communicative
► Individual children have their own special way of
communicating and we need to discover what it is. Like
strangers in a new country we have to find out the
language and learn to use it.
► Communication is our responsibility, not the child’s!
►
Indicators of Communicative Intent
Alternating eye gaze: where a person looks at you, then
at something or someone else, then back to you again
► Clear waiting for a response
► Active seeking of proximity: a person moves to follow
or sit close to someone
► Systematic variation in behaviour: if you fail to
respond, the person will repeat, elaborate or change the
behaviour
► Persistence and intensity of behaviour: if the person
repeats the same behaviour in different situations and with
different people, and seems to do so forcefully
► (Grove 2000 p. 5)
►
Seeking Understanding
Communicative Partner
► “Children
acquire language and other
cultural tools with those who are more
competent. These people guide, assist and
scaffold at the right developmental level”
(Vygotsky 1978) cited by Katherine Buckley and
Claire Latham (2006) ‘Developing a
Communication Book for Eye Pointing Children’
(Oxford, ACE Centre) http://acecentre.hostinguk.com
Knowledge, skills and attitudes you
need
► Patience
and lots of time
► An ability to carefully observe a child’s behaviour
and think about what they might be trying to
communicate
► An ability to listen to others in the child’s network
and learn how they make sense of the child’s
communication (they may not be right!)
► A good working knowledge of child development
(especially language development)
Basic Principles of Communication
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Be available
Be observant and tuned in
Be responsive
Relax and enjoy the interaction
Be warm and playful
Celebrate responses and new behaviours
Allow pauses
Let the person lead (do not dominate!)
Create and repeat familiar, mutually enjoyable, interactions
Extend your response to become turn-taking and other
new developments (Nind and Hewett 2000 p.16)
Useful Approaches 1
► Affective
Communication Assessment
(Coupe O’Kane and Goldbart 1998)
an observational assessment is undertaken with
a carer/advocate.
this consists of asking how a child indicates ‘I
like this, I do not like that’ by introducing
activities to a child and observing and video
recording the responses.
then you observe how those responses are
displayed in the child’s natural environment
Useful Approaches 2
► Intensive
Interaction (Nind and Hewett
2000; 2005)
this approach is based on natural parent/child
interaction, and involves observing and
responding to the natural communication of the
child;
then developing the fundamentals of
communication in a relaxed, responsive manner
that encourages the child to set the agenda
Useful Approaches 3
► Eye
Pointing and Communication
Boards (Buckley and Latham 2006)
Based on a child’s natural tendency to look
towards things they are interested in and to
look away from things they are not interested in
Can be developed into a system for identifying
basic choices
Also can be linked with communication boards
with a range of pictures, symbols etc. to extend
vocabulary
Language
Functions
Recurrence
Possession
Rejection
Non existence
Action
Agent
Object
Attribute
Core Vocabulary
Fringe Vocabulary
Useful Approaches 4
► Symbols
and Stories
Life Story Books: enable a child to ‘tell their
story’ using pictures, symbols, video material
etc.
Story Books and Boards: do the same thing but
restricted to particular topics/issues
Happy/Sad images “ how do you feel when”
help link feelings to events
Symbols and Pictures: represent issues and
choices to the child
Advocacy
► Advocates
are an essential part of the support
network for severely disabled children and young
people
► Independent of service providers they befriend
and support young people, help to make choices
and to represent their views in decision making
forums
► They may be crucial in interpreting the wishes and
feelings of a child where a complex decision is
required.
Acknowledgement
► All
cartoons are copyright and reproduced
from Jenny Morris (2002) A Lot to Say! A
guide for social workers, personal advisers
and others working with disabled children
and young people with communication
impairments (London, Scope Research
Department)
Useful Resource Packs
► ‘I’ll
Go First’ – pack enabling children to
participate in formal reviews published by the
Children’s Society. Available from:
www.childrenssociety.org.uk
► ‘How it Is’ - an image vocabulary for children
about feelings, rights and safety, personal care
and sexuality published by the NSPCC. Available
from www.nspcc.org.uk
► ‘Listen Up’ - a toolkit of multimedia resources to
help children and young people with a learning
disability complain about the services they use
published by Mencap. Available from
www.mencap.org.uk
References and Reading
Katherine Buckley and Claire Latham (2006) ‘Developing a
Communication Book for Eye Pointing Children’ (Oxford,
ACE Centre) http://ace-centre.hostinguk.com
► Judith Coupe O’ Kane and Juliet Goldbart (2nd ed. 1998)
Communication Before Speech (London, David Fulton)
► Nicola Grove (2000) ‘See What I Mean’: Guidelines to aid
understanding of communication by people with severe
and profound learning disabilities (London Mencap/BILD)
► Jenny Morris (1998) Don’t Leave Us Out: Involving
disabled children and young people with communication
impairments (York, Joseph Rowntree Foundation)
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References and Reading
► Jenny
Morris (2002) A Lot to Say! A guide for
social workers, personal advisers and others
working with disabled children and young people
with communication impairments (London, Scope)
► Melanie Nind and Dave Hewett (2000) A Practical
Guide to Intensive Interaction (Kidderminster,
BILD)
► Melanie Nind and Dave Hewett (2nd ed. 2005)
Access to Communication (London, Jessica
Kingsley)