Social Skills
Training for Parents, Educators, and Caregivers~The Micro Steps are
the Key to Success
By Ellen Mossman- Glazer M.Ed. Life
Skills Coach, Behavior Specialist.
What we Learned in Kindergarten
In
pre-school, where a big chunk of the curriculum revolves around sociability,
you can hear the specific details of a social behavior weaving through
the daily dialogue. Listen to the teacher: "Sit in your spot and
put your hands in your lap. Wait until it is your turn to speak. Raise
your hand to say something." Keep to the schedule: "It's time
to stop what you are doing. Pick up the toys. Put them neatly in their
spots on the shelf. Then come sit quietly on the carpet." There
you have the clearly articulated, easily visualized micro steps that
teach preschoolers to socialize, organize and 'behave' in a group setting.
Then as academics move to the front of classroom priorities, social
curriculum fades.
For
our challenging loved ones, who continue to need to hear the information
imbedded in those micro steps, school is a baffling and unfriendly place.
The student with Asperger Syndrome who loves to be the researcher of
the facts for a science project is unaware of the required give
and take in a cooperative learning group. Because she comes across
as overbearing and inflexible, her peers tune her out, exclude her from
group membership, and she has lost out on the joys of learning. The
smart, active ADHD child has no strategies to contain his impulses and
channel his abundant energy into his schoolwork, and so wanders around
on the periphery of the learning action though he would really love
to be center stage with his talents.
Along
with their 'challenging' characteristics, every one of our challenging
loved ones have their unique and often very charming set of strengths,
talents and interests, which they yearn to share with others in some
way. However, their behaviors tend to send a different, contradictory,
self-sabotaging message. Shemay be solely focused on a preoccupation
or her perfectionism. He may be an entrenched avoider, a self-appointed
boss, or a full time worrier-- or perhaps he does not seem to worry
at all about the consequences of his choices. Her super sensitivity
to touch or sound may invite alienation. Middle and senior high kids
are labeled 'losers' because they are seen awkwardly wandering, lost
in the halls of their own schools. These are examples of the kid types
who are stuck inside themselves, with their faces pressed upon the windows
that look out at the social world of their peers, to whom everything
seems to come effortlessly. Their peers know how to fit in and their
reward is acceptance. And these challenging children grow up to be adults
that also wander--lost in relationships, job settings and their social
community. They are stuck in a confusing, isolating place, mostly misunderstood,
misread, mysteries to themselves and others. And what they are really
communicating through their behavior, is how very difficult it is to
adapt to the world around them.
The
Hidden Curriculum
What
stands between those who are in the action and those stuck on the inside
looking out? It has become known as the 'hidden curriculum. They
need steady education and specific skill coaching through those micro
steps because it is not automatic for them to get what is
going on and then figure out 'what happened' or 'learn their lessons'
from playing unfair or breaking promises, or 'hogging' the scene. In
his book, Its So Much Work to Be Your Friend, Richard Lavoie,
M.A. M.Ed., discusses how each school has it own individual culture,
which determines the details of the hidden curriculum and thus what
it takes to be in.' He says Your child is tested on his
academic skills every few days, but his social interactions are 'tested'
and evaluated hundreds of times each day."
For
our challenging loved ones who may have a diagnosis of ADHD, High Functioning
Autism or Asperger Syndrome or another that brings with it behavioral
challenges, the rules of social acceptance are invisible ...until they
have the opportunity to learn the micro steps.
What
is a Micro Step?
Micro
steps are the very teeny tiniest instructional steps that give
the most specific and direct information to help your challenging loved
one learn the how-to's of being social or getting the job done. Micro
steps are the missing ingredients that lie between what parents and
teachers already know about behavior change, and what is left to insert
into their behavior change or social skill-building program. Identifying
those essential micro steps can be a very challenging puzzle. Micro
skill building is a creative and systematic process where little batches
of skills are woven together, with the incredibly wonderful payoff of
teaching our challenging loved ones to navigate life independently,
appropriately and happily!
The
Broad Stroke Skill Sets
Following
are some of the wider groups of skills which break down into the micro
steps that are key to school and social success:
And
here are some of the ingredients that put the 'Art' into a behavior
change program: goals, rules, feelings, rewards, feedback, motivation,
structure, natural consequences, feelings of safety and belonging and
more...
Exercise:
The One Week Question
Here
is the very first step in creating a social curriculum: Peer into the
life experiences of your challenging loved one.
Spend
one whole week focusing on what you see, feel and hear related to one
question from the list below. Keep 'the' question tucked in the
front of your brain, as you go through the regular weekday routines
on into the weekend activities. Quietly observe. Collect pieces to the
puzzle. Be curious. Wait patiently for information-collecting opportunities.
Reflect about what is really going on. Make notes. Remember these are
not solution questions. We are not there yet...now the questions: