Elementary & Middle Schools Technical Assistance Center Logo
a transparent image used to ensure positioning on the web pageMy Personal Page a transparent image used to ensure positioning on the web page
List of Topics
List of Topics
Vote for a New Topic
a transparent image used to ensure positioning on the web page

Autism Main Page

Executive Summary

Research Highlights

Models and Classroom Instruction
    -Guidelines and      Considerations...
    -Intervention Models
    -Summary Table

Case Study

Principles and Tips

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Definitions

References
Links and Resources

Events

a transparent image used to ensure positioning on the web page
Communication
Linking Agent Directory
Online Chat
Bulletin Board
a transparent image used to ensure positioning on the web page
Journal
Write to My Journal
Send Us EmailPublic Homepage

Autism
Addressing the Challenges of Autism: Research Findings and Promising Practices


a transparent image used to ensure positioning on the web page

Models and Classroom Instruction: Intervention Models

Treatment and Education of Autistic and Related Communication-Handicapped Children (TEACCH) Promising Method
          
Program Method
              Group Instruction
              Home-Based Intervention
         Research on Efficacy in Classrooms
         Research on Efficacy of Home-Based Interventions

  • Eric Schopler developed TEACCH at the Department of Psychiatry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1974.

  • This North Carolina (state wide) comprehensive intervention system provides a variety of services to individuals with autism and their families.

  • TEACCH is one of the first autism intervention programs to incorporate parents as crucial members of the intervention team. The main goal of the educational program is parent-professional collaboration.

  • The program has these priorities:
    • Focusing on the individual
    • Understanding autism
    • Adopting appropriate adaptations

  • TEACCH incorporates a broadly based intervention strategy that builds on existing skills and interests.

    Division TEACCH provides both group instruction training for teachers and home-based intervention services for individuals.

Back to Top

Program Method

Group Instruction

TEACCH strategies can be integrated into individual classrooms. Trainers from Division TEACCH in North Carolina provide training for teachers and professionals and consultation to classrooms and school systems throughout the nation. School programs affiliated with TEACCH focus on a broad range of skills, including communication, socialization, and practical skills, and foster independence and preparation for adult living. Teachers help students to learn skills in a natural environment, and help children to apply skills to a variety of settings.

TEACCH methods typically rely on the visual presentation of information and focus on teaching individualized lessons to each student. Teachers use visual organizers and cues to help children with autism who have visual processing strengths. For those students with communication difficulties, teachers use pictures, manual signs, and written words in the classroom. By incorporating routines into every classroom setting, teachers give students the opportunity to understand and predict the order of events around them. Division TEACCH encourages teachers to de-emphasize the deficits common to children with autism and to focus on each child’s skills and strengths.

During TEACCH training, teachers learn how to establish a structured learning environment, which is simply an organized and carefully modified classroom. Teachers alter the physical organization of their classroom by taking into consideration the size of the room, lighting, and distracting wall space. In addition, teachers use signs and pictures to mark clear boundaries for different activities. Visual schedules are another crucial aspect to TEACCH classrooms. Teachers establish schedules for the entire class and for individual students to reduce anxiety about what will happen throughout the school day.

Back to Top

Home-Based Intervention

An individual with autism can receive one-on-one TEACCH instruction. After an initial needs assessment to determine the child’s strengths and weaknesses, the teacher (or TEACCH-trained specialist) works with the parents to develop goals for the child. The educational program begins with the teacher working with the child on a task while modeling the teaching skill for parents observing through a one-way mirror. A second teacher explains the techniques and writes down specific activities and methods for the parents to try throughout the following week. During subsequent sessions, parents demonstrate what they have been practicing at home while both teachers provide feedback and change the program as necessary.

Although educational plans vary depending on the individual child’s needs, the typical TEACCH session includes a combination of the following components: structured teaching activities, reinforcement of strengths, practice predicting future events by working with a schedule, development of communication (verbal and non-verbal) skills, and pre-vocational/pre-academic activities. Parents are encouraged to implement these strategies at home whenever possible. The teachers suggest individualized teaching strategies, which change and develop as the child progresses.

Typical TEACCH programs last ten weeks with at least one visit to the home and one visit to the child’s daily education site to observe. Each week, the parents and the child meet with two teachers for one-hour sessions. As the parents become more proficient with the teaching techniques, they assume primary responsibility for the direction of the program, and the teachers assume a secondary support role. Toward the end of the program, the meetings become biweekly or monthly as the teachers begin to phase out their involvement.

Back to Top

Research on the Efficacy of the TEACCH Program in Classrooms

  • The program is open to all children with autism in the state of North Carolina. It is also available to students with communication difficulties who do not have autism. Because of the lack of a controlled setting, it is difficult to determine the efficacy of TEACCH.

  • Panerai, Ferrante, Caputo, and Impellizzeri (1998) found that the TEACCH structured intervention program improved working skills and functional communication abilities in all 18 children and adolescents with autism who participated in the study. Although this study did not use a control group, the study remains particularly interesting because researchers implemented the program in a classroom setting with multiple students. These researchers found an overall improvement in student competence, a reduction of behavioral problems, and an increase in spontaneous communication after both 12 and 18 months of treatment.

Back to Top

Research on the Efficacy of the TEACCH Program and other Home Based Interventions

  • Home based interventions are a cost-effective means of extending the child’s exposure to therapy. Instead of the intervention period ending when the child leaves the therapist, there is an opportunity for the child to practice new skills in an authentic context throughout the week.

  • The size of a therapist’s patient load, scheduling conflicts, and available time commitments restrict the amount of time that a therapist can dedicate to a single patient.

  • Being a part of the intervention team gives the family a sense of power in a situation that often makes families feel powerless.

  • Children generally show increases in responsiveness to direction from parents and teachers after exposure to home-based programs. Self-report survey results of parents and therapists report an increased presence of appropriate behavior.

  • Ozonoff and Cathcart (1998) found that the TEACCH home intervention program was effective in enhancing the development of all 11 children with autism in the experimental group. Researchers found that after four months of clinical and home programming, the children in the experimental group made greater improvements in fine motor, gross motor, imitation, and nonverbal conceptual skills than the 11 children with autism in the no-treatment control group.

Back to Top

 

 

 
 

 


EMSTAC
1000 Thomas Jefferson St., NW
Suite 400
Washington, DC 20007
Tel: (202) 944-5300
TTY: 1-877-334-3499
Fax: (202) 944-5454