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Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- TEACCH Autism Program
- Objectives of presentation
- UNC TEACCH Autism Program
- TEACCH mission statement
- TEACCH intervention philosophy
- Understanding ASD (1)
- Understanding ASD (2)
- View of ASD as a learning disability
- Learning styles: implicit learning (1)
- Difficulty learning things automatically
- Learning styles: implicit learning (2)
- Learning styles: attention (1)
- Learning styles: attention (2)
- Auditory processing difficulties
- Learning styles: executive functioning
- Learning styles: multiple perspectives
- Adolescents with ASD
- Summary: different learning styles in ASD
- Understanding behavior problems
- The advantages to supporting learning styles
- TEACCH intervention
- Structured TEACCHing
- Learning styles: implication for intervention
- Structured TEACCHing: meaning and clarity
- Individual schedules
- Work system
- Work system: picture
- Work system: written list
- Visual instructions (1)
- Visual instructions (2)
- Goals of structured TEACCHing
- Structured TEACCHing references
- Stay connected
Topics Covered
- UNC TEACCH Autism Program
- Autism Spectrum Syndrome
- ASD unique learning styles
- The relationship between learning differences and challenging behaviors
- Using schedules in ASD
- Using work schedules in ASD
Links
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External Links
Talk Citation
Klinger, L.G. (2021, May 30). TEACCH autism program: supporting the unique learning differences of autism [Video file]. In The Biomedical & Life Sciences Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 27, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/IEBU5868.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Financial Disclosures
- There are no commercial/financial matters to disclose.
TEACCH autism program: supporting the unique learning differences of autism
Published on May 30, 2021
41 min
A selection of talks on Neuroscience
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, I am Laura Klinger, I am the Director of
the TEACCH Autism Program at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill,
and I'm also an associate professor in the Department of Psychiatry.
In today's presentation, I'm going to give you
an overview of the TEACCH Autism Program, with
an emphasis on talking about our commitment to supporting
the unique learning differences of individuals with autism.
0:28
At TEACCH, we support individuals with autism across
the lifespan, from infancy through older adulthood,
so in my presentation today I'll give you some examples of how to support
learning differences of young children, adolescents, and adults with autism.
0:47
The objectives of my presentation today are to help you
understand the unique learning styles associated with autism.
Specifically, I'll be talking about five different learning differences,
or learning disabilities, associated with autism spectrum disorder.
My second goal today is to help you understand
the connection between these learning styles and
challenging behaviors, that you might experience from
children with autism at home, or in schools, or in adult life.
My third goal today is to review evidence-based practices
and strategies that are included in structured teaching,
specifically focusing on visual supports that are
designed to support the learning differences that I'll be discussing today.
1:38
Let me start by giving you an overview of
the TEACCH Autism Program here, at the University of North Carolina.
We were established in 1965 by the UNC School of Medicine.
We were founded by Eric Schopler, who at the time was one of the first professionals in
the world who thought that autism was not caused by poor parenting,
but instead was a learning difference or learning disability.
We were state funded, as a series of regional centers, in 1972.
Currently, TEACCH is a series of seven outpatient clinics, around the state of North Carolina in
the United States, we're part of the UNC healthcare system and the North Carolina AHEC program.
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