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Bkdad82
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17 Jul 2014, 1:00 am

Stormymomma wrote:
My son (almost 3 yrs) isn't in ABA yet, but he likes to do this side glancing thing. Likes to look at reflections or something. Really likes shiny things. I took him to the eye dr. and his vision is fine. In about a year, my son's eye dr. is going to have a test for kids with autism. They think maybe it takes a longer time for some of them to process what they see? I guess it would be interesting to find out if this is the case or not.


I don't think it's a delay in processing so much as a strong stim ( based on suggestion in this thread). Btw I highly recommend ABA. It can be really rewarding, but it's repetitive. ABA is like animal training but what happens is that when a child gets trained he/ she gains a skill, and can use that for communicating and understanding their world. For example cause and effect. My son was being taught to point to what he wants. So now he understands to get this I need the point to the jar and the parent willl open it and give me a treat. You might think how dehumanizing this is. However my son brought me a water bottle and showed it to m e to open. Cause and effect. While the training itself can be animalistic, the results learned can be used to think in a very human way.



btbnnyr
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17 Jul 2014, 1:51 am

I would rather stare at lights than do ABA.


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Bkdad82
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17 Jul 2014, 9:59 am

btbnnyr wrote:
I would rather stare at lights than do ABA.

Of course I would rather eat junkfood and watch tv all day. The way I see it is that sometimes doing something unpleasant makes life better later on.



Stormymomma
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17 Jul 2014, 11:23 pm

Bkdad82 wrote:
Stormymomma wrote:
My son (almost 3 yrs) isn't in ABA yet, but he likes to do this side glancing thing. Likes to look at reflections or something. Really likes shiny things. I took him to the eye dr. and his vision is fine. In about a year, my son's eye dr. is going to have a test for kids with autism. They think maybe it takes a longer time for some of them to process what they see? I guess it would be interesting to find out if this is the case or not.


I don't think it's a delay in processing so much as a strong stim ( based on suggestion in this thread). Btw I highly recommend ABA. It can be really rewarding, but it's repetitive. ABA is like animal training but what happens is that when a child gets trained he/ she gains a skill, and can use that for communicating and understanding their world. For example cause and effect. My son was being taught to point to what he wants. So now he understands to get this I need the point to the jar and the parent willl open it and give me a treat. You might think how dehumanizing this is. However my son brought me a water bottle and showed it to m e to open. Cause and effect. While the training itself can be animalistic, the results learned can be used to think in a very human way.

That was just his eye doctors opinion. It would be interesting to see if there is some truth to it is all I'm saying. What my son is experiencing may be different from yours. He likes lots of movement and strong input. One of his OTs mentioned it and I asked if they think it is something he would benefit from. So, we will see what happens.



setai
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18 Jul 2014, 11:49 am

btbnnyr wrote:
I would rather stare at lights than do ABA.


My son really enjoys his ABA. He anxiously waits for his BI to arrive and opens the door with a huge smile and a Hi to them. There are times he doesn't like a specific task, esp if he as mastered it and they haven't closed the program. He is bummed if they have to cancel and this is even with it being 6 days a week. They push him, but do it in way that it is bite size changes and filled with play, attention and engaging activities. The two BI, they trade off days, are young professionals who care and have really gotten to know my son. The supervisor is very knowledgeable, approachable, and always not only listens to us, but treats us as equals in the team and the experts on our son. I know that ABA can be a really bad experience for some people, horrible in the past when it was punishment based, but his program is has exceeded our expectations. I don't know if it an outstanding program because I have nothing to compare to, but it has been great for him.