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《自闭儿教养宝典》读书笔记

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121#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-4 08:53:40 | 只看该作者

re:[QUOTE][B]下面引用由[U]kw...

下面引用由[U]kwenma2[/U]发表的内容:

以上你说的想象游戏是一个方面,但是第五阶段最重要的是----想像游戏是要跟情感相联系,从而让孩子体会各种情感---高兴,兴奋,幸福,沮丧,愤怒,妒忌,羡慕,难过,骄傲,自豪等等正负的情感。我觉得这才是...


5)强化形成各种想法的能力,主要有"让我们一起聊聊天和让我们一起假扮游戏

原来这里是和第五阶段对应,谢谢K老师提示。

第五阶段我的感觉应是“强化形成各种想法的能力”,即到达这个阶段后,应可以形成比较复杂的想法,也就是说会“思考”一些东西了,只是这时的“思考”还处于比较简单的阶段,但可以为便复杂的灰色地带及多因思考做好准备。体会各种情感也是非常重要的,就我回忆孩子的训练历程而言,情感的体会需要贯穿与孩子相处的始终。只是有时候孩子无法分辨,例如可能会把高兴与愤怒看成一样的,这时孩子就需要提升自身的能力后才可以体会得到这种情感的变化,有些孩子还需要进行专门的“想法解读”课程来提升。

因此我的理解是第五阶段的假想(扮)游戏是围绕让孩子能够“形成想法”为主要目的来设计的,K老师的看法如何?

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122#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-4 09:05:28 | 只看该作者

re:[QUOTE][B]下面引用由[U]柳暗...

下面引用由[U]柳暗花明2009[/U]发表的内容:

  
请教一下没您家宝宝不找大人您是怎么训练解决的?我家孩子2岁半,带到外面就自己瞎逛,不知道找人,我们也很着急!


要训练孩子的参照能力。你的孩子还小,不能用那些比较残酷的方法来对付(比如将孩子扔在外面,然后再让他找大人,也不能用发一个指令,然后训练他正确反应),建议先进行“追逐性游戏”和“抢东西”的游戏,让孩子学会参照后才开始正试训练。有兴趣的话可以参照“李宝宝的自然教法”之“不找大人的训练”及“抢小狗”,注意,要先训练“抢小狗”,但仅仅这个游戏不能解决问题,家长要自行设计更多的抢东西的游戏及追逐性游戏才可以,可以参照RDI第一阶段水平一来设计。李宝宝的这个问题我们从开始训练到解决,用了近一年的时间,现在可以象正常孩子一样带他出去不用担心会走失了。
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123#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-4 09:12:25 | 只看该作者

re:[QUOTE][B]下面引用由[U]su...

下面引用由[U]sunnywang[/U]发表的内容:

建议看看原版的 the child with special needs,台湾那位翻译的,实在不怎么样,当然,还是要感谢她翻了这本书,但要是翻得不好,那简直是害人加误人,
地板时光的精髓,在于抓紧一...


这本书应是“特殊儿教养宝典”,也有中译本,比“自闭儿教养宝典”要厚一倍,我一直想读,但总是翻不开那本书,请常来分享。象F版的RDI笔记,就让我省事不少。
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124#
发表于 2010-1-5 05:17:37 | 只看该作者

re:[QUOTE][b]下面引用由[u]笑咪...

下面引用由笑咪咪发表的内容:



5)强化形成各种想法的能力,主要有"让我们一起聊聊天和让我们一起假扮游戏

原来这里是和第五阶段对应,谢谢K老师提示。

第五阶段我的感觉应是“强化形成各种想法的能力”,即到达这...

我觉得还是不是“想法”,而是“情感”。比如在做假想游戏时,两个小朋友每人拿着一个小木偶扮演角色。比如A偷偷拿了B的东西,B表示很愤怒,于是小朋友B要用语言和动作来表现出他的愤怒。地板时光走到这一步很多时候都是DRAMA了,如同编戏。但是在编戏中表演出故事情节和人物的情感,去经历人物的情感。只有这样真正的经历,你从旁边来点评他(“哦,你感到很愤怒哦!”),让他感到从身体的变化(肌肉紧张,双手发抖,感到脸红,等等)到他的情感的反应的综合反应能够对应于这个抽象的词汇“愤怒”,他才能真正懂得什么是“愤怒”。任何情感其实都有不同的身体物理方面的反应。我想,ZB儿本生对感觉方面的刺激不正常,很难把自身的身体反应跟高级抽象的情感(感觉)联系起来,所以通过第五阶的这些练习,能够让他们最终明白这些抽象的情感的词汇,同时他们也就具备了这些情感,将来也就能够理解这些情感吧?自己的一点小感想。
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125#
发表于 2010-1-5 07:12:27 | 只看该作者

re:K太天才,每句都说到我的心坎里。情感是动...

K太天才,每句都说到我的心坎里。情感是动机,想法是动机DRIVE的行为。
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126#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-5 08:30:20 | 只看该作者

re:续116楼2.以一种有情绪意义的...

续116楼

2.以一种有情绪意义的方式参与这个世界.“婴儿会看、会听、会闻、会尝,不过因为不信任这个世界而想要逃避,因此宁可选择不使用这些能力。自闭症相关障碍儿童,若是对于感觉刺激的反应过低或反应过度,而必须藉由外力将他们拉进外在世界,或因为信息处理能力的问题而容易在感觉信息输入时感到因惑,那么他们就难以建立上述能力。”

正常孩子这个阶段很快就过去了,但不知道为什么我们的孩子却需要“外力”来帮助他进入,李宝宝也是这样一个孩子。因为他“不相信这个世界”,而当时我们根本没有这个意识,认为是他的性格问题,采取的强制措施,结果出现了孩子宁可相信自已错误的判断,也不相信父母的情况.有一次在布吉,他看到一条有点象回西丽的路,就一定要往那条路走,我们怎么拉,怎么说他都不相信我们,而是一个人往前冲,而且那是在夜晚,那条路还是一条临时通道,路灯很暗.
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127#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-5 08:33:30 | 只看该作者

re:3)促进有目标的情绪互动,主要有"好玩的...

3)促进有目标的情绪互动,主要有"好玩的声音\脸部或感觉游戏"及"沟通循环的游戏"
5)强化形成各种想法的能力,主要有"让我们一起聊聊天和让我们一起假扮游戏

K老师,阶段三的内容与阶段五的内容我们如何把控重点?
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128#
发表于 2010-1-5 23:51:13 | 只看该作者

re:[QUOTE]阶段三的内容与阶段五的内容...

阶段三的内容与阶段五的内容我们如何把控重点?

阶段三的内容: 强调的是相互之间的基本的交流。用一些基本的方法展开互动,要他OPEN CIRCLE或者CLOSE CIRCLE,从而跟你形成很多互动回合。

阶段五的内容:是在阶段三的基础上,要求孩子能够做想像游戏,发展到在想像游戏中编戏(DRAMA)。在DRAMA中让他去经历那些抽象的情感和情绪。这层是很内容很丰富的。小K现在才在这级的初级阶段。 
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129#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-7 09:01:07 | 只看该作者

re:3.与外在世界做有目标的互动.这是正常孩...

3.与外在世界做有目标的互动.这是正常孩子半岁的能力,李宝宝已通过.
4.将一连串具有目标的行动组合成一种模式.这就有点难了,不过还是可以进行训练的,书上列举了一些方法:找东西,穿越障碍,排序等等.这些对李宝宝而言已不成问题,因此我们进行的是有时间跨度的训练,目的是提高他的逻辑思考能力并用这种能力来达到目的.最近的做法就是赚钱,然后用赚到的钱在星期天去游乐场,打算再过两年,能力再提高一点的话就要去摆地摊了.

现在李宝宝开始对钱有感觉,在学校得到老师表扬回到家是有钱拿的,认真做作业也是有钱拿的,肯尝试新的食物,特别是带有异味如辣的,也有钱.如果是正常孩子享有这样的待遇,那没过多久就会掉到钱眼里去了,但李宝宝到现在,仍然不会主动"赚钱",到目前为止,仍然没有听到李宝宝说:"我做作业,爸爸给我一块钱好不好?"如果有了这样一句话,这个项目大约就要准备停止了.现在他还只是在意放到包里的钱有没有因为做错事被罚款而变少,但他又不会将自已的包藏好,不让大人发现.我们如果在不告诉他的情况下将他的钱拿走,他也不会发现,看来将来李宝宝的工资只好全部交给老婆保管了.
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130#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-7 09:05:34 | 只看该作者

re:[QUOTE][B]下面引用由[U]kw...

下面引用由[U]kwenma2[/U]发表的内容:

阶段三的内容: 强调的是相互之间的基本的交流。用一些基本的方法展开互动,要他OPEN CIRCLE或者CLOSE CIRCLE,从而跟你形成很多互动回合。

阶段五的内容:是在阶段三的基础上,要求...


K老师,第五阶段你们都进行了哪些游戏?
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131#
发表于 2010-1-7 12:20:25 | 只看该作者

re:没有现成的,全是孩子拿着现有的玩具编故事...

没有现成的,全是孩子拿着现有的玩具编故事,你跟他一起互动。不过你把他往你的目标上面引而已。
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132#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-8 12:43:46 | 只看该作者

re:5.使用想法.到了这个阶段,孩子以现实为...

5.使用想法.到了这个阶段,孩子以现实为基础的逻辑思考能力开始出现.试验的方法很简单,买回一些冰琪淋,放到冰箱,不要让孩子看到,然后问他:"我们有冰淇淋,宝宝帮我拿来好不好?"如果孩子知道到冰箱里去找,OK,孩子就已经具备了使用想法的能力,至于到什么程度,那要依孩子的经验和家长的训练而定.

6.建立不同想法之间的联结.如果能精熟这一点,孩子就有了思考的能力.遗憾的是李宝宝在这点上仍是处于初级阶段.我只好从不同的事物或事情之间的联结开始训练.

方法一:两词造句.例如我会说:"用水和杯子说一句话",李宝宝回答:"杯子里有水",在他还答不上来的时候,我会先拿一杯水放在他面前,然后再问.
方法二:单词造句.这次只给他一个词了.这时需要从他最感兴趣的东东开始,例如用"火车"造句,这时李宝宝是非常感兴趣的.然后过渡到虚词.
方法三:关联词联想.具体方法是我说一个词,李宝宝说一个相关的词.例如我说熊猫,他说竹子,我说肯德基,他说鸡腿等等.
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133#
发表于 2010-1-10 23:53:25 | 只看该作者

re:每次看完K妈的点评,总觉得不过瘾,总忍不...

每次看完K妈的点评,总觉得不过瘾,总忍不住再跑到她地里去翻弄几下才罢干休。
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134#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-11 08:54:27 | 只看该作者

re:第十章 更高层次的抽象及反省式思考....

第十章 更高层次的抽象及反省式思考.

这里讲的是多因思考能力,本项我们仍未能真正进入,仍然是处于有机会就试一下的状态.我的感觉是李宝宝仍未能达到这一层次.书上举了一个让我吐血的例子来说明问题:"美国为了能在革命战争中获胜,必须获得法军的协助,因为法国一向与英国对立,而英国是美国的敌国"

李宝宝离这种思维还有十万八千里,而书上说七岁左右就能精熟多因思考及三角思考能力.还好,李宝宝不到七岁,还可以安慰一下自已.

书上的例子用不上,只能自行设行教案来教.先留空,试一下李宝宝对教案的反应后再回来填坑.

本章还提到了灰色地带思考,指的是做比较的能力,要八岁才能达到,李宝宝的只能先放一下了,现在五比三多多少的问题他都还不能解决呢.
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135#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-12 07:42:26 | 只看该作者

re:抽象及反省式思考,对所有的孩子都绝对困难...

抽象及反省式思考,对所有的孩子都绝对困难,包括正常孩子,先放过.

使用语言来推理及思考,本项可以进行,书上没告诉我怎么做,个人感觉以下活动应有帮助,准备用来对付李宝宝:
1.猜谜
2.远距离阅读常用句子,及小故事
3.征求意见.用他最喜欢的玩具来做道具,进行不同的组合,让他用语言来指挥,但不能自已动手.
4.进行简单推理训练,如按规律列,比较式推理训练.

作者在这里给出了建立抽象思考能力的操作步骤.
1.确定孩子已精熟六个基本的发展阶段.
2.制造一个激发动机的情境
3.引入新的专门术语
4.制造多种感觉的学习管道
5.让孩子体会到思考的乐趣(最后一条是我加上去的)
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136#
 楼主| 发表于 2010-1-13 08:13:33 | 只看该作者

re:这里提到的六个基本的发展阶段有点莫名其妙...

这里提到的六个基本的发展阶段有点莫名其妙.因为前文第四章提到了九个发展阶段,第五章又提到了七个阶段,到底哪个是"六个基本的发展阶段"?我觉得应是前九个阶段中的前六个,不知道其他人的意见如何?

按此对照,李宝宝已可以达到第六阶段,但"精熟"则无法量化.只好先开始了.如果等到我明白到什么程度叫精熟或是等我发现李宝宝开始精熟的时候,黄花菜都凉了.

接下来是心智理论和同理心.
这里可以引用黄豆帖子里的话来说明:
这个社交中的心眼是什么?仔细看,其实就是能把对方的心思看透然后决定自己怎么行动。自闭症的孩子往往第一步就败下阵来了,他根本不知道人家在想什么。别人说话没听懂,social cues没看见。他的能力就这么多。
所以,手把手的教是不可避免的,需要教会的宗旨是:you treat other people the way you want to be treated.不管什么事,一定要让他首先想到别人的感受,和后果。最简单的,他不小心打到你,你要对他讲你的感受:“我被你打到了,很疼啊!怎么办?“他如果没办法,你可以给他选择,”你可以说,对不起,我心里会好些。你也可以掉头就走,这样我会不高兴,下次不跟你玩了。你也可以什么都不说,帮我揉揉,这样我就不疼了。“任何一件小事,都是锻炼。希望经过锻炼,他的第一反应能先落到别人头上,遇事脑子先动起来。

这段话讲得比书上明白多了.
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137#
发表于 2010-1-14 01:32:12 | 只看该作者

re:这是我三年前贴在地板时光年会的帖子里的。...

这是我三年前贴在地板时光年会的帖子里的。前六个阶段就在里面。
http://www.elimautism.org/leadbbs/a/a.asp?B=5&ID=198513

Stanley I. Greenspan, M.D.
Serena Wieder, Ph.D.

MOBILIZING EACH OF THE SIX FUNCTIONAL DEVELOPMENTAL LEVELS

I. Shared Attention
A. Use the child’s individual sensory and motor profile to draw him into shared attention (e.g., more visual experiences for the child who especially enjoys looking).
B. Harness all the available senses, as well as motor capacities and affects (e.g., involve the child in interactions that involve vision, hearing, touch, and movement, coupled with highly enjoyable activities).
C. Use both constructive and playfully obstructive strategies (e.g., dance or run together with the active child; build a fence with your arms around the child who likes to avoid or run away).
D. Stretch the child’s capacity for shared attention by increasing the interactive circles of communication rather than trying to get the child to focus on a particular object or toy.

II. Engagement
A. Follow the child’s lead in order to engage in interactions that bring him please and joy.
B. Build on these pleasurable and enjoyable interactions.
C. Join in the child’s rhythm in terms of affect, visual, auditory/vocal, and motor movements.
D. Join with physical objects of the child’s pleasure (e.g., put the car he is fascinated with on your head and let him roll it on your head as though it were a mountain).
E. Attempt to deepen the warmth and pleasure by giving priority to his comfort and closeness (allow him to lie on you or cuddle or rock with you or stroke your hair for long periods of time).
F. If necessary, use a little bit of playful obstruction to entice him to focus on you. (Engagement involves a range of emotions, from pleasure and warmth to annoyance and assertiveness.)

III. Two-way, purposeful interactions with gestures
A. Be very animated and attempt to exchange subtle facial expressions, sounds, and other gestures (i.e., entice her into a rapid back-and-forth rhythm).
B. Go for the “gleam in her eye” (i.e., entice her with your animated exchanges into an alert, aware, involved back-and-for pattern).
C. Open and close circles of communication by building on her natural interests, inspiring her to respond to what you do. Keep it going as long as you can.
D. Treat everything she does as purposeful, in order to harness circles of communication (flapping hands could be the basis for an interactive flay-your-hands dance or for a game of waving at each other).
E. Encourage initiative by avoiding doing things for him or to him.
F. Support initiative by challenging him to do things to you (e.g., when roughhousing, get him to jump on you or push you down or climb up to your shoulders, rather than simply picking him up and swinging him or doing other things that may be fun, but do not support his initiative).
G. Help hi go in the direction he wants to by initially making his goal easier to achieve, such as moving the desired ball closer to him.
H. Help him be purposeful by creating a goal where none may appear to exist (e.g. he is moving his car around in a back-and-forth motion and you might stand behind the schoolhouse and claim to need a delivery).
I. Over time, build obstacles between him and his desired goal to increase the number of circles of communication (block his access to the door or turn the door knob the wrong way).
J. As needed, be playfully obstructive (build fences around him if he is aimless; get between him and his goals when he is repetitive or perseverative (e.g., get stuck behind the door he’s opening and closing.

IV. Two-way, purposeful problem-solving interactions
A. Extend circles of communication by creating extra steps (e.g., play dumb so he has to show you how to open the door; when she is moving the car to the school, you exclaim and gesture that you first need a delivery at the hospital).
B. Extend circles of communication by being playfully obstructive and creating interesting barriers or obstacles to his goals.  
C. Work up to a continuous flow of circles (e.g., some children will gradually go from three circles to five to ten, etc,; others will get into a continuous flow of thirty plus circles quickly).
D. Challenge her to close circles of communication (e.g., the child is moving her car but ignores your desire t have your dolly go for a ride in it. You block her car with your hand while you gesture in an animated fashion for her to give the dolly a ride.).
E. Combine affect with action and interaction (i.e., always be animated and show affect through voice and facial expressions while creating interactions).
F. Increase the interactive range, including affects and emotions (e.g., child is just hugging dolls and the wolf comes to make trouble, so the child becomes challenged t o knock the wolf away and increase assertiveness).
G. Increase interactive range in different processing areas, including:
1. Visual/spatial (e.g., chase, hide-and-seek, treasure hunt games)
2. Motor planning and sequencing (e.g., obstacle courses, search games, child has to use two or three steps to open the latch to find the cookie). Perceptual motor (e.g., looking/doing interactions such as rolling, throwing, and/or kicking Nerf balls back and forth, reaching for desired objects on a moving string (while crossing the midline)).
3. Auditory processing and language (using sounds and, when possible, words to communicate (e.g., use animated, compelling vocal tones to draw child’s attention or to communicate (e.g. use animated compelling vocal tones to draw child’s attention or to indicate safety, danger, approval, disapproval, or excitement)).
4. Imitation (draw child into copycat interactions where child is shown how to reach for or get something he wants or to make a sound that will get him something he wants).

V. Elaborating ideas
A. Encourage the use of ideas in both imaginative play (e.g., hugging the dolls) and realistic verbal interactions (e.g., “open” door).
B. Use ideas off of affect or intent (i.e., “want juice!” rather than labeling juice in a picture).
C. W(ords)A(ffect)A(ction) – Always combine words or ideas together with affect and action.
D. Chit-chat using words all the time.
E. Encourage imagination through using familiar interactions for pretend play (e.g., feeding, hugging, or kissing dolls).
F. Jump into a drama that your child has begun. Become a character and ham it up. Communicate mostly as the character, rather than as yourself.
G. Alternate between being a character in a drama of your child’s choosing and a narrator or sideline commentator.
H. Periodically, summarize and encourage your child to move the drama along with a question or challenge.
I. Entice your child into long dialogues.
J. Create challenges where ideas or words are necessary (e.g., “up” because the needed action figure is up on the shelf). Keep extending the dialogue.
K. Encourage the use of all types of ideas (symbolic expression) (e.g., pictures, signs, complex spatial designs (building a city), and acting out roles oneself).


VI. Building bridges between ideas (emotional thinking)
A. Close all symbolic circles in both pretend play and reality-based dialogues (e.g. challenge the child always to respond to what you are saying and doing, just as you respond to what she is saying and doing).
B. Challenge the child to connect different ideas or subplots in a drama.
C. Whenever the child seems confused, brings in something from left field, or seems fragmented or piecemeal in her thinking, challenge her to make sense and be logical. Do not supply the missing pieces of logic (e.g., “I’m confused. We were having a tea party and now we’re flying to the moon?
What happened?”)
D. Be patient and summarize the confusing elements. If the child is not able to build bridges between his own ideas, provide some multiple choice possibilities. Avoid supplying the answer or taking control of the discussion.
E. Challenge with “w” questions, including “what” “where” ‘when” “who” and “why.”
F. When the child ignores or avoids responding to “w” questions, such as “what did you like at school today?” through out some silly possibilities to get the child thinking (e.g., “Did the elephant visit your class today?” or “Did you see your boyfriend (or girlfriend) in class?”)
G. Explore reasons for actions or feelings (e.g., “Why are you attacking me?”).
H. Use multiple choice as needed, always putting the likely answer first and the unlikely one second.
I. Have your character in the pretend play create unexpected situations to challenge the child towards creativity and new solutions. Use humor, conflict, and novelty.
J. Challenge the child t broaden the emotional range in the dramas (e.g., so that it includes caring as well as assertiveness and aggressions).
K. Encourage reflection on feelings in both pretend dramas and reality discussions (e.g., “why do you want to go outside?” or “what’s the reason for the attack?”)
L. Gradually increase the complexity of reflective thinking (e.g., challenge child to give different reasons or motives for actions or consider different views – “How does Sally feel after Mary took her toy” and “How does Mary feel?”)
M. Challenge child to give opinions rather than facts (e.g., ‘what color do you like best and why?” rather than “which color is this?”)
N. Enjoy debates and negotiations, rather than simply stating rules (except where the rule is absolutely essential).
O. Encourage choices and discussions of choices.
P. Encourage and challenge the child into the back-and-forth use of words, instead of focusing on correct grammar.
Q. Increase spatial thinking (e.g., treasure hunt games, junior architect games – lay out a whole city for the action figure drama, etc.).
R. Encourage motor planning and sequencing capacities (e.g., draw diagrams for a tea party or house decorations or attack strategies for space wars, etc.).
S. Encourage understanding and mastering concepts of time by challenging the child to use the past, present, and future (e.g., “What are the space monsters going to do tomorrow?” or “Yesterday we went to the zoo. What would you like to do tomorrow?”)
T. Encourage understanding and use of quantity concepts (e.g., how many cookies should each doll at the tea party have?).
U. Pre-academic or early academic work, complex problem-solving, and social skills should be based on providing an understanding of basic concepts (i.e., connecting ideas) through emotional interactions.
For example:
1. In math, negotiate using candies, cookies, or coins to learn adding or subtracting. Keep the numbers small to avoid rote memory. Eventually work on visualizing the objects and doing the calculations using images.
2. In reading, visualize or picture what is being read (whether the parent or child reads it) and then pretend it out and/or discuss it. Embellish the ideas further.
3. In writing, initially use flexible spelling and word choice and focus on interactive, creative stories and communicating needs or opinions. Later, work on correct spelling, etc.
4. For problem-solving and social skills, work on anticipating by visualizing what may happen later or tomorrow, including positive and negative situations. “Picture” the situations, feelings involved, typical solutions, and alternative ones.
V. In both pretend and reality-based conversations, challenge towards higher levels of abstraction by shifting back and forth between the details (the trees) and the big picture (the forest). For example, periodically wonder how all the things the child has been talking about fit together.
W. Gradually expand the child’s range of experiences (without overload or over-stimulation) because emotionally-based experiences are the basis for creative, logical, and abstract thought.
X. Challenge the child to symbolize auditory, visual-spatial, tactile, motor planning and affective capacities together (e.g., building a city [visual-spatial, motor planning, tactile] with different dramas being acted out [auditory-verbal, thematic, imaginative] involves creative, affective interests being
played out in a pattern of integrated thinking).
VII. Tailor your interactions to the child’s individual differences in auditory
processing, visual/spatial processing, motor planning and sequencing, and
sensory modulation.
A. Profile the child’s individual differences based on observation and history.
B. Work with the individual differences. Utilize natural strengths for interaction (e.g., visual experiences for the child with relatively strong visual/spatial capacities). Gradually remediate vulnerabilities (extra practice for listening to and using sounds and words for the child who has a receptive language or auditory processing challenge; extra soothing for the sensory-over reactive
child; and/or extra compelling and animated for the sensory-under active child).
VIII. Simultaneously attempt to mobilize the six functional emotional
developmental levels (attention, engagement, gestures, complex preverbal problem-solving, using ideas, and connecting ideas for thinking). For the younger child or child with developmental challenges, the later levels will be mastered as the child develops. (See Greenspan and Wieder, The Child with Special Needs.)
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138#
发表于 2010-1-14 01:46:42 | 只看该作者

re:关于第七,八,九阶段,你现在教还是不...


关于第七,八,九阶段,你现在教还是不教?

我觉得在日常生活中有很多时候已经涉及到了,你可以浅显地教。比如,比较的概念,“爸爸比妈妈好?”“好多少?”“好一点点,还是好得多?”相对的概念,而且不是非黑即白。。有不同的层次,这样孩子从这些小的东西上面就潜移默化,知道中间还有很多不同的档次,对将来的灰色地带思考很有好处,可以说是打下一定的基础。 

关于多因思考和三角思考能力,其实也有。简单的例子关于三角思维:宝宝来找你要你的东西,你拒绝;他会向妈妈说,让妈妈帮他向你要,以达到同样的目的。或者更简单一个例子:宝宝要拿一个东西,太高了,拿不到,但是他会来让你帮助他而拿到。这个也是一个三角思维的例子。所以宝宝应该还是有一些这个能力的。关键是遇到这种类型的事情,家长如何启发他开动他的三角思维。三角思维上去了,就可以顺便成多角思维。另外多因思维也可以在日常生活中灌输的。

以上为个人心得,若有不全面的地方,望K。呵呵。。。。
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139#
发表于 2010-1-14 06:31:44 | 只看该作者

re:我也写个例子,K版点评下这算提高灰色地带...

我也写个例子,K版点评下这算提高灰色地带思考能力吗。

问宝宝阿姨漂亮还是妈妈漂亮?宝宝一般回答XX漂亮,另一个摆臭脸,旁边有人辅助说出-妈妈阿姨都漂亮。
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140#
发表于 2010-1-14 08:08:07 | 只看该作者

re:[QUOTE][b]下面引用由[u]笑咪...

下面引用由笑咪咪发表的内容:
这里可以引用黄豆帖子里的话来说明:
这个社交中的心眼是什么?仔细看,其实就是能把对方的心思看透然后决定自己怎么行动。自闭症的孩子往往第一步就败下阵来了,他根本不知道人家在想什么。别人说话没听懂,social cues没看见。他的能力就这么多。
...

什麽,什麽? 黃豆?!
哎!這個掃黃的節骨眼上,怎麽就稀里糊塗的“被黃”了,還“被豆”了?
豆娥冤啊!
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