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The RDI™ Program is:
Article Source: http://www.connectionscenter.com/RDI/WhyRDI.asp
- a parent-based clinical treatment program where
parents are provided the tools to effectively teach Dynamic
Intelligence skills and motivation to their child.
- about the joy in connecting: a path for
people on the Autism Spectrum to learn friendship, empathy, and a love
of sharing their world and experiences with others.
- about changing neurology: a way for people
on the spectrum to become flexible thinkers and creative problem
solvers who enjoy the challenges of change and who desire to expand
their world.
- based on over 20 years of research by
world's experts on typical development as well as scientific studies on
people with autism.
- developmental & systematic: a
step-by-step program that focuses first on building the motivations so
that skills will be used & generalized; followed by carefully and
systematically building the skills for competence and fulfillment in a
complex world.
- realistic: a program that can be started
easily, and implemented seamlessly into regular, day-to-day activities
to enrich the life of the whole family.
- precise: a method that measures and begins
at the edge of each person's capability and then carefully but
continually raises the bar.
- effective: within 18 months, over 70% of
children in our initial study improved their diagnosis based on the
Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS). The majority of children
also moved from a special education to a regular classroom without
needing an aide.
Why do parents like the RDI™ Program?
Article Source: http://www.connectionscenter.com/RDI/RDIfamily.asp
Parents have told us they like the RDI™ Program because it is:
- Systematic but flexible
- Developmental
- Empowering
- Balancing and "Normalizing"
- Easy to carry over into everyday life
- Structured, with an emphasis on video-taped feedback and both professional and parent "peer" support.
- Systematic but flexible:
Parents find that having access to over 300 step-by-step objectives
linked to specific activities is critical in rendering the program
"user-friendly." Parents also gain the confidence they can carry out
the RDI™ Program without extensive involvement of therapists.
Parents
also prefer elements of the program that allow them, with their
professional Consultant's guidance, to customize their style of
involvement, communication, activities, scheduled intervention periods
and settings based on the unique needs of their child.
- Developmental:
Teaching parents to focus on the child's current developmental
functioning breaks the cycle of failure and feelings of inadequacy for
both parents and child.
Setting careful, developmentally appropriate objectives gives parents
and children permission to focus on skills that can realistically be
attained, knowing that these simpler successes are laying the
foundation for eventual competence in more complex areas.
The RDI™ Program breaks the cycle of failure for both parent and the child.
- Empowering:
Parents
recognize that the RDI™ Program is not teaching them to be a therapist,
but rather providing a means to more effectively guide their child's
development. Many parents tell us that the RDI™ Program has helped them
to feel like a competent parent for the first time.
Once they
have mastered the first few stages of the program, children begin to
take on more responsibility for monitoring and regulating their actions
in various settings. Parents and teachers report that after children in
the RDI™ Program had mastered social referencing (the second of
twenty-six RDI™ stages) they were no longer forced to constantly prompt
and direct the child.
Finally, families reported that the RDI™
Program model made it easier for both parents, but especially fathers,
to participate and to accrue the benefits described above.
- Balancing and "Normalizing":
After several months of doing the RDI™ Program parents report
that everyday life becomes less stressful and more enjoyable for
everyone in the family. Siblings do not feel excluded or neglected.
Parents can move out of a state of "permanent crisis" and resume
a more normal life again.
- Easy to carry over into daily life
Parents are unanimous in praising the help they receive
to translate program components into their daily lives. Elements
of the program such as emphasizing declarative and non-verbal
communication, practicing coordinated actions in everyday settings
and creating opportunities for "productive uncertainty," so essential
for the development of Social Referencing, are incorporated into
the family's lifestyle. Once embraced, these elements enhance
the wellbeing of all family members and so become easy to sustain.
- Structured, with an emphasis on video-taped
feedback and both professional and parent "peer" support:
Parents report that the discipline of preparing and editing video
segments helps them to allocate time for reflection and review
of their communication and interaction with their child.
Parents
new to the RDI™ Program receive important psychological
support from their more experienced counterparts who are willing
to share their own experiences and knowledge through videos, specially
constructed Internet message boards, chat rooms and appearances
at parent training workshops.
The RDI™ Program translates into day-to-day activities, so the whole family benefits."Chris preferred to play in other's presence using his own
agenda. When interacting with adults he wouldn't ask for responses
or feedback, he would just tell a story or anecdote from start to
finish.
Last year he would have watched the kids play, but would not
have tried to join in, nor would he have been able to follow the
fast-paced play of his peers. His initial response to stress was
to withdraw and hide. Now he gets excited when he sees other kids.
More play with his main buddies at school.
There has been a great improvement in social referencing. He
is initiating joint attention all the time. He is more concerned
with my feelings. He has acquired the desire to learn new things.
He really gets along with his sister and actually plays really coordinated
games for long periods of time with her."
Chris, age 8, New York
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