Guest guest Posted March 2, 2011 Report Share Posted March 2, 2011 Just wondering if many of you have completed ABA training?? We have a 10 y.o with behavioural difficulties and are wondering whether it would be useful for us to do the training to apply it with the help of a psych?? Does anyone have any thoughts?? Tammy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 2, 2011 Report Share Posted March 2, 2011 Tammy, We use a board certified ABA therapist for our son and she has been great. I am already a very matter of fact parent and was using charts at home so she really didn't need to help us there but she helped with some of the school issues. I'm not sure about the parent training though. I think the key is to develope a point or reward system and use it consistantly. It helps if the school and you are on the same sheet of music and that they too apply the behavior interventions that you use at home at school. Have you tried ABA therapy for your son or worked with a behavior analyst? Usually they develope the behavior interventions and then train you on how to apply them. ne > From: Tammy <phelpstammy@...> > Subject: ( ) ABA > > Date: Wednesday, March 2, 2011, 3:37 AM > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Â > > > > > > > > > > Just wondering if many of you have completed ABA > training?? > > > > We have a 10 y.o with behavioural difficulties and are > wondering > > whether it would be useful for us to do the training to > apply it > > with the help of a psych?? > > > > Does anyone have any thoughts?? > > > > Tammy > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2012 Report Share Posted March 19, 2012 Thanks for quick response. The issue here is that the tutors are only students and they are not that well trained. Your set up (with the shadow) is exactly what we are looking for, but with tutors who know what they are doing. That is why we had idea of someone qualified who can be the shadow. I will go to that ABA website, thank you.ThanksDanny From: bty462988 <soph.henderson@...> Autism Treatment Sent: Monday, 19 March 2012, 15:29 Subject: Re: aba Is your ABA consultant the one who costs £72 an hour?? I have been doing an ABA program for 5 years (we are in Kent) and have our son fully funded by the LA (not an easy task but do-able) You need to get on some forums such as ABA-uk to find some local therapists. You do normally have to pay heftily for aba consultant but should not need one more than 4 times a year - you can then consult with them on changes of program via email and phone consults if need be. If you have a good team of trained tutors in place the program runs smoothly. We send our child to mainstream with one of these tutor for several sessions a week. We call them a shadow! I would recommend you go down this route rather than use a TA (school teaching assistant) as this is luck of the draw if you get a good one, and they will try and force you to put your child in a special needs school if they don't do well Feel free to email me if you want any more info Sophie > > good afternoon everyone, > > im a long term lurker and first time poster! > my daughter (kayla) is autistic and 5 in july. she is more or less non verbal apart from the odd word here and there. > she was diagnosed at the age of about 2.5 and since then it has just been a total rollercoaster. Initially, after researching the internet we took her off milk and glueten and she improved pretty much straight away, but then she plateaued. We took her to see jean muscroft but we have really struggled to implement the correct diet as she is unbelievably picky. she eats gf fruit loaf from tescos with vitalite, genius bread with vitalite, gf choc biscuits from asda, gf pizzas from asda and innocent smoothies. All of which we know are not 'correct' but are the nearest to it that she will eat. we started aba 12 months ago, where an aba instructor would come up to liverpool (where we live) and teach kaylas mum and 2 volunteers we have helping us. As a result kayla is slowly picking up things and can say things like 'i want buscuit' but she is still struggling in a lot of areas. it is proving difficult to carry out these sessions and what we basically need is someone who is qualified in aba (or something similar) who we can pay to spend 2 or 3 days a week with kayla in school 1 to 1. the current company we use will not budge on their £72 an hour plus expenses and accomodation so we are looking for someone nearer liverpool who would accept less that that hourly rate and would not need accomodation. Can anyone reccommend someone? we are eventually trying to get the council to fund someone in the school full time (forgotten what this is called), i also need advice on this as well! but we are prepared to pay in the meantime. sorry for the long post! and it is an education listening to some of you parents on here, thanks > > Danny > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2012 Report Share Posted March 19, 2012 Thanks for quick response. The issue here is that the tutors are only students and they are not that well trained. Your set up (with the shadow) is exactly what we are looking for, but with tutors who know what they are doing. That is why we had idea of someone qualified who can be the shadow. I will go to that ABA website, thank you.ThanksDanny From: bty462988 <soph.henderson@...> Autism Treatment Sent: Monday, 19 March 2012, 15:29 Subject: Re: aba Is your ABA consultant the one who costs £72 an hour?? I have been doing an ABA program for 5 years (we are in Kent) and have our son fully funded by the LA (not an easy task but do-able) You need to get on some forums such as ABA-uk to find some local therapists. You do normally have to pay heftily for aba consultant but should not need one more than 4 times a year - you can then consult with them on changes of program via email and phone consults if need be. If you have a good team of trained tutors in place the program runs smoothly. We send our child to mainstream with one of these tutor for several sessions a week. We call them a shadow! I would recommend you go down this route rather than use a TA (school teaching assistant) as this is luck of the draw if you get a good one, and they will try and force you to put your child in a special needs school if they don't do well Feel free to email me if you want any more info Sophie > > good afternoon everyone, > > im a long term lurker and first time poster! > my daughter (kayla) is autistic and 5 in july. she is more or less non verbal apart from the odd word here and there. > she was diagnosed at the age of about 2.5 and since then it has just been a total rollercoaster. Initially, after researching the internet we took her off milk and glueten and she improved pretty much straight away, but then she plateaued. We took her to see jean muscroft but we have really struggled to implement the correct diet as she is unbelievably picky. she eats gf fruit loaf from tescos with vitalite, genius bread with vitalite, gf choc biscuits from asda, gf pizzas from asda and innocent smoothies. All of which we know are not 'correct' but are the nearest to it that she will eat. we started aba 12 months ago, where an aba instructor would come up to liverpool (where we live) and teach kaylas mum and 2 volunteers we have helping us. As a result kayla is slowly picking up things and can say things like 'i want buscuit' but she is still struggling in a lot of areas. it is proving difficult to carry out these sessions and what we basically need is someone who is qualified in aba (or something similar) who we can pay to spend 2 or 3 days a week with kayla in school 1 to 1. the current company we use will not budge on their £72 an hour plus expenses and accomodation so we are looking for someone nearer liverpool who would accept less that that hourly rate and would not need accomodation. Can anyone reccommend someone? we are eventually trying to get the council to fund someone in the school full time (forgotten what this is called), i also need advice on this as well! but we are prepared to pay in the meantime. sorry for the long post! and it is an education listening to some of you parents on here, thanks > > Danny > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2012 Report Share Posted March 19, 2012 Thanks for quick response. The issue here is that the tutors are only students and they are not that well trained. Your set up (with the shadow) is exactly what we are looking for, but with tutors who know what they are doing. That is why we had idea of someone qualified who can be the shadow. I will go to that ABA website, thank you.ThanksDanny From: bty462988 <soph.henderson@...> Autism Treatment Sent: Monday, 19 March 2012, 15:29 Subject: Re: aba Is your ABA consultant the one who costs £72 an hour?? I have been doing an ABA program for 5 years (we are in Kent) and have our son fully funded by the LA (not an easy task but do-able) You need to get on some forums such as ABA-uk to find some local therapists. You do normally have to pay heftily for aba consultant but should not need one more than 4 times a year - you can then consult with them on changes of program via email and phone consults if need be. If you have a good team of trained tutors in place the program runs smoothly. We send our child to mainstream with one of these tutor for several sessions a week. We call them a shadow! I would recommend you go down this route rather than use a TA (school teaching assistant) as this is luck of the draw if you get a good one, and they will try and force you to put your child in a special needs school if they don't do well Feel free to email me if you want any more info Sophie > > good afternoon everyone, > > im a long term lurker and first time poster! > my daughter (kayla) is autistic and 5 in july. she is more or less non verbal apart from the odd word here and there. > she was diagnosed at the age of about 2.5 and since then it has just been a total rollercoaster. Initially, after researching the internet we took her off milk and glueten and she improved pretty much straight away, but then she plateaued. We took her to see jean muscroft but we have really struggled to implement the correct diet as she is unbelievably picky. she eats gf fruit loaf from tescos with vitalite, genius bread with vitalite, gf choc biscuits from asda, gf pizzas from asda and innocent smoothies. All of which we know are not 'correct' but are the nearest to it that she will eat. we started aba 12 months ago, where an aba instructor would come up to liverpool (where we live) and teach kaylas mum and 2 volunteers we have helping us. As a result kayla is slowly picking up things and can say things like 'i want buscuit' but she is still struggling in a lot of areas. it is proving difficult to carry out these sessions and what we basically need is someone who is qualified in aba (or something similar) who we can pay to spend 2 or 3 days a week with kayla in school 1 to 1. the current company we use will not budge on their £72 an hour plus expenses and accomodation so we are looking for someone nearer liverpool who would accept less that that hourly rate and would not need accomodation. Can anyone reccommend someone? we are eventually trying to get the council to fund someone in the school full time (forgotten what this is called), i also need advice on this as well! but we are prepared to pay in the meantime. sorry for the long post! and it is an education listening to some of you parents on here, thanks > > Danny > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2012 Report Share Posted March 19, 2012 You might want to consider a yeast protocol, the vitalite would be feeding that as would the fruit loaf.-- is Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2012 Report Share Posted March 19, 2012 You might want to consider a yeast protocol, the vitalite would be feeding that as would the fruit loaf.-- is Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 19, 2012 Report Share Posted March 19, 2012 You might want to consider a yeast protocol, the vitalite would be feeding that as would the fruit loaf.-- is Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 20, 2012 Report Share Posted March 20, 2012 Hi ,we have also used skybound and their workshops are good. However our volunteers are only students with very little (if any) experience. I would prefer someone (like someone from skybound or YAP who we have also used) to go into school with kayla and work like that. This way the teachers are also learning as well.ThanksDanny From: Margaret Kerr <kerr455@...> "Autism Treatment " <Autism Treatment > Sent: Tuesday, 20 March 2012, 10:07 Subject: Re: aba Hi Danny, we are up in Scotland where there are few ABA therapists. Our son's home programme is supervised by Risca from Skybound Autism therapy and her business partner Lynsey Herdman. We would benefit from more supervision but it would be very costly however they are brilliant . We are lucky with Noah's diet but there are times when I treat eating food as a task that he has to complete in order to get what he wants. It can take two hours but it is not about the food so much as Noah learning to accept other people's requests.Sorry started this last night and forgot to finish it.Inknow it sounds difficult and you get all sorts of escape behaviours from tears to cuddles but when Noah accepts that bit of food I know he has understood something important and it is not about control on my part.I have no ideas if this helps. All the best!Sent from my iPadOn 19 Mar 2012, at 17:11, Kath <butler39@...> wrote: Hi DannyI know it's not easy, but if I were in your position I would make a monumental effort to ditch the GF processed food and try and follow the advice of your nutritionist.Believe me it gets a lot harder as they get older and bad habits become entrenched I have been there believe me.I am still struggling to get my18 year old severely autistic daughter to eat healthily.I have to juice vegetables and fruit,and make soup and smoothies to get nutrition into her.When she was young we did an ABA programme, we used PEACH to provide training and supervision.We used students and with regular workshops and supervision they got very good.There are probably far more tutors around these day if you advertise.Good luck with everythingKathSent from my iPadOn 19 Mar 2012, at 15:19, "dgjones_pga" <dgjones_pga@...> wrote: good afternoon everyone, im a long term lurker and first time poster! my daughter (kayla) is autistic and 5 in july. she is more or less non verbal apart from the odd word here and there. she was diagnosed at the age of about 2.5 and since then it has just been a total rollercoaster. Initially, after researching the internet we took her off milk and glueten and she improved pretty much straight away, but then she plateaued. We took her to see jean muscroft but we have really struggled to implement the correct diet as she is unbelievably picky. she eats gf fruit loaf from tescos with vitalite, genius bread with vitalite, gf choc biscuits from asda, gf pizzas from asda and innocent smoothies. All of which we know are not 'correct' but are the nearest to it that she will eat. we started aba 12 months ago, where an aba instructor would come up to liverpool (where we live) and teach kaylas mum and 2 volunteers we have helping us. As a result kayla is slowly picking up things and can say things like 'i want buscuit' but she is still struggling in a lot of areas. it is proving difficult to carry out these sessions and what we basically need is someone who is qualified in aba (or something similar) who we can pay to spend 2 or 3 days a week with kayla in school 1 to 1. the current company we use will not budge on their £72 an hour plus expenses and accomodation so we are looking for someone nearer liverpool who would accept less that that hourly rate and would not need accomodation. Can anyone reccommend someone? we are eventually trying to get the council to fund someone in the school full time (forgotten what this is called), i also need advice on this as well! but we are prepared to pay in the meantime. sorry for the long post! and it is an education listening to some of you parents on here, thanks Danny Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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