Characteristics and Needs
Characteristics and Needs
Characteristics and Needs
Educational Characteristics:
Communication verbal and nonverbal
Repetitive behavior, interests and activities
Demonstrates difficulty with gross motor skills, poor balance, or difficulty
coordinating motor movements
Demonstrates difficulty with fine motor skills, such writing
Educational Needs:
Use visual reminders such as visual scripts or Social stories prompt social skills
and to pre- pare for changes in routines
Teach cause and effect concepts
Provide a predictable and safe environment in a manner that avoids triggering
rages and guards the student from bullying and teasing
Gain the student’s attention before giving brief and concrete instructions
Use direct instruction to teach multiple meaning words
Check for understanding. Do not assume comprehension just because the
student parrots what has been heard or because child can decode words.
Comprehension skills are frequently not as strong as decoding and verbal skills
Limit opportunities for excessive talk about perseverative interests by allowing
specific times during the day and a limited amount of time to verbally share
special perseverative interests
Provide accommodations in physical education class for gross motor skill deficits
and offer adult supervision on the playground to assist student with less well
developed motor skills to be a part of group games
Allow students to use keyboarding if handwriting is too laborious, Some students
perform better with cursive writing than with printing.
Behavioral deficits
Inability to relate to others
Lack of functional language
Sensory processing deficits
Cognitive deficits
Lack of joint attention in infancy
May not respond to name and may appear deaf
Oblivious to others and appears to be in own world
Little or no eye contact
Few or no reciprocal friendships
May treat people as objects (e.g., use another person’s hand to reach an object
up high)
Resistance to being cuddled or touched
Does not understand give-and-take of social interaction and instead monologues
or lectures
May not understand nonverbal cues such as eye gaze, facial expressions, and
body language
May not spontaneously seek interactions with others because of not knowing
how to interact or having no interest in interacting
May display socially inappropriate behaviors because of not understanding social
conventions
Social/Behavioral Needs:
Provide opportunities for direct social skill instruction in the following areas:
interpreting non- verbal communication and responding to social cues, making
friends, dealing with frustration, and learning how to participate in a
conversation
Teach appropriate play skills with peers and object uses through direct
instruction
Teach students to focus on multiple cues
Article Summary:
When working in an inclusive setting there are many pros and cons to using
paraprofessionals. When a student has a disability, a one on one paraprofessional is often one of
the first steps towards inclusion. Inclusion for students with ASD comes with many benefits and
is becoming more and more popular within the schools. Paraprofessionals provide much needed
Settings,” author Jan Blacher discusses the pros and cons to having paraprofessionals. Among
the many pros, Blancher states that, “academically, the paraprofessional can provide additional
instruction to follow up the teachers lesson” (Blacher, 2007). Often times the classroom teacher
is so busy that making extra time for students who need it may be hard to squeeze in. The extra
instruction is a huge benefit. Other benefits Blacher discussed were that parapros can often
foster peer interactions, they may have a better understanding of working with a child with a
disability or a specific disability, and that they can also provide relief to an overwhelmed gen ed
teacher.
Along with the obvious benefits comes disadvantages. Blacher states that, “parents and
teachers do not always realize that a child’s reliance on a one to one aide can potentially
negatively impact the child’s socialization, self-concept, and overall quality of education”
(Blacher, 2007). The child may become over dependent on the parapro which can be
counterproductive. The author goes on to list other disadvantages such as: having a less
qualified person doing the majority of instruction, physical separation from the class,
interference with peer interaction, and the teachers becoming overly reliant on the
This article did a great job summarizing the pros and cons of having a paraprofessional.
These are all things that should be considered when deciding whether or not a one on one aide
would be beneficial to an ASD students in a gen ed classroom. If the goal is inclusion, will a one
on one aide provide that for the student or would it prevent the student from full inclusion?
Parents. Teachers, and support staff must look at both the pros and cons before deciding if a