Resources
Module Content
You can download a document that includes all content from the module, with the exception of videos. This resource can support your learning while completing the module or be saved for future reference.
Additional Documents
Embedding Natural Intervention within Daily Activities_20240223
Implementation Checklist for Naturalistic Intervention_20240301
Reflection Questions
The Reflection Questions document can be downloaded at any time and used in a variety of ways. You can view it before starting your work so that you know which questions will be asked in the videos and/or on the webpages. You can also access it at the end of your work so that you can see all your responses to the questions. This tool can be helpful for documenting your learning and referring to later or for sharing it with others in group discussions or as demonstration of your online progress.
Discussion Questions
The Discussion Questions provided below can supplement and extend your individual learning and be used by facilitators or coaches to prompt meaningful discussions.
Q: Where and when should naturalistic intervention be used?
A: A correct answer will include the following:
Across daily routines and activities Across a learner's natural environments
Q: What are some features of an interaction within a naturalistic intervention?
A: A correct answer will include some or all of the following:
- The interaction is language-rich
- The interaction is learner-centered
- The interaction is reciprocal
- The teacher, practitioner, or team member follows the learner's lead
- The teacher, practitioner, or team member is at the learner's level
- The teacher, practitioner, or team member responds to the learner's verbal and nonverbal initiations
- The teacher, practitioner, or team member provides meaningful verbal feedback
- The teacher, practitioner, or team member expands the learner's utterances
Q: What are the behavioral techniques that can be used to bring out a target behavior during naturalistic intervention?
A: A correct answer will include the following:
- Model
- Mand-model
- Modified time delay
- Incidental teaching
Q: How might the environment be arranged in order to elicit the target behavior?
A: A correct answer will include the following:
- The teacher, practitioner, or team member chooses motivating materials/activities
- The teacher, practitioner, or team member behaves as the "keeper of the goods" and manages the materials in such a way as to maintain the learner's interests
- Materials are kept within view but out of reach
Q: In what types of activities might naturalistic intervention be used?
A: A correct answer will include the following:
- Learner-directed activities
- Routine activities
- Planned activities
Activities on this page are provided at both the introductory and advanced level and can be copied and used within existing professional development or university coursework.
Introductory Activities:
Activity One: Promoting Evidence-Based Thinking
Using the information provided in the section on the naturalistic intervention evidence base:
- Scan the abstract from the articles listed
- Read at least two of the articles listed
- Prepare a short summary that you could share with a parent group or school team on why the use of naturalistic intervention is considered an evidence-based practice
Activity Two: Identifying Routines and Environments
Think about a learner that you know or talk with a parent or teacher about a learner with ASD. Identify four different environments or routines that are part of the learner's daily life and that might be appropriate places in which to use naturalistic intervention.
Activity Three: Environmental Arrangement
Write a short description of a setting in which the environment is not favorable to bring out a target behavior related to increased language use or social skills. Write a second description related to how the environment might be changed in order to encourage use of the target behavior.
Advanced Activities:
Activity One: Preparing an Activity Matrix
Using the table in the case study of Brian as a template, create an activity matrix for a learner with whom you work. Describe what types of techniques you might use in many different environments in order to bring out the target behavior.
Activity Two: Training a Team
Prepare a presentation that you might give to a school team, including special education staff, paraprofessionals, and general education teachers, in order to teach them how to use naturalistic intervention. Describe how you might utilize resources from OCALI and AIM to support the training.