18031
A Longitudinal Look at the Effectiveness of Teaching Social Thinking to Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorders
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to examine the effectiveness and long term outcomes of a social cognitive intervention (Social Thinking) in four 9-11 year old boys with Autism Spectrum Disorders (diagnosis of AS and HFA).
Methods: Four boys, aged 9-11 years, were included this treatment study. Multiple baseline measures across behaviors were used to examine generalization of social pragmatic and social problem solving skills immediately after an eight-week pilot intervention and one-year post intervention. All lessons within the treatment model were grounded in the principles of social cognition (Social Thinking). The format of each treatment session included the following components: 1) Gathering (3-5 minutes of open talk time); 2) Group lesson (Specific social cognitive strategies/Social Thinking Lessons); 3) Practice/Unstructured time.Therapists provided verbal/visual feedback during the practice/unstructured time to reinforce the lesson. Weekly meetings and checklists addressed treatment fidelity and consistency. External validity and contextual relevance for families and subjects were highlighted.
Results: Findings indicated gains on dependent measures from baseline to generalization probes during the 8-week intervention as well as an increase or maintenance during a one-year follow-up probe. All four subjects either maintained or increased “expected” social behaviors or decreased “unexpected” social behaviors with the exception of verbal initiations. However, the change in this skill appeared to be a result of limited verbal demands during the activity included in the measure. Both parents and subjects indicated an increase in social awareness and problem solving strategies.
Conclusions: This study adds to the small pool of clinic-based studies examining the effectiveness social interventions based on social cognition. This model is a shift from traditional social skill approaches in that this cognitive behavioral approach (Social Thinking) promotes understanding of “why” related social skills are relevant in social exchanges and suggests that a meta-cognitive approach may be more relevant for those we currently refer to as AS/HFA or those with ASD who have strong cognitive and language skills.