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Home Videos Autism DIR Floor Time model and approach

DIR Floor Time model and approach

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DIR floor time approachThe Interdisciplinary Council on Developmental & Learning Disorders (ICDL) and Stanley Greenspan, M.D. present.

DIR®/Floortime
The Developmental, Individual Difference, Relationship-based (DIR®/Floortime™) Model is a framework that helps clinicians, parents and educators conduct a comprehensive assessment and develop an intervention program tailored to the unique challenges and strengths of children with Autism Spectrum Disorders (ASD) and other developmental challenges. The objectives of the DIR®/Floortime™ Model are to build healthy foundations for social, emotional, and intellectual capacities rather than focusing on skills and isolated behaviors.

The D (Developmental) part of the Model describes the building blocks of this foundation. Understanding where the child is developmentally is critical to planning a treatment program. The Six Developmental Milestones describes the developmental milestones that every child must master for healthy emotional and intellectual growth. This includes helping children to develop capacities to attend and remain calm and regulated, engage and relate to others, initiate and respond to all types of communication beginning with emotional and social affect based gestures, engage in shared social problem-solving and intentional behavior involving a continuous flow of  interactions in a row, use ideas to communicate needs and think and play creatively, and build bridges between  ideas in logical ways which lead to higher level capacities to think in multicausal, grey area and reflective ways. These developmental capacities are essential for spontaneous and empathic relationships as well as the mastery of academic skills.

The I (Individual differences) part of the Model describes the unique biologically-based ways each child takes in, regulates, responds to, and comprehends sensations such as sound, touch, and the planing and sequencing of actions and ideas.  Some children, for example, are very hyper responsive to touch and sound, while others are under-reactive, and still others seek out these sensations. Biological Challenges describes the various processing issues that make up a child's individual differences and that may be interfering with his ability to grow and learn 

The R (Relationship-based) part of the Model describes the learning relationships with caregivers, educators, therapists, peers, and others who tailor their affect based interactions to the child’s individual differences and developmental capacities to enable progress in mastering the essential foundations. 
 
DIR and Floor TimeWhat is the difference between DIR® and Floortime™ and how are they related?
Central to the DIR®/Floortime™ Model is the role of the child’s natural emotions and interests which has been shown to be essential for learning interactions that enable the different parts of the mind and brain to work together and to build successively higher levels of social, emotional, and intellectual capacities. Floortime™ is a specific technique to both follow the child’s natural emotional interests (lead) and at the same time challenge the child towards greater and greater mastery of the social, emotional and intellectual capacities.  With young children these playful interactions may occur on the “floor”, but go on to include conversations and interactions in other places. The DIR®/Floortime™ Model, however, is a comprehensive framework which enables clinicians, parents and educators to construct a program tailored to the child’s unique challenges and strengths.  It often includes, in addition to Floortime™, various problem-solving exercises and typically involves a team approach with speech therapy, occupational therapy, educational programs, mental health  (developmental-psychological) intervention and, where appropriate, augmentative and biomedical intervention. The DIR®/Floortime™ Model emphasizes the critical role of parents and other family members because of the importance of their emotional relationships with the child.

This video clip shows the first minutes of Dr. Greenspan's lecture "Overcoming the Big Mistake: Transforming Education for Children with ASD and other Special Needs". You can see the full lecture by registering for the Online edition of the conference at www.icdl.com   

This video clip shows the first minutes of Dr. Greenspan's lecture "What Makes an Intervention Work",  

Dr. Stanley Greenspan discusses with Dr. Serena Wieder the 3 insights that serve as the cornerstones of developmental interventions for children with Autism and other special needs, like the DIR/Floortime Model.  

This video shows a 22 month old child with ASD. The first minutes of the video shows how the mother ask many questions to the child but he does not reply back, he does not open or close circles of communication. The video illustrate how Dr. Greenspan coaches the mother, helping her to enter into the child's world, follow his interests and help him elaborate on what he wants. During this floortime session the child starts opening and closing many circles of communication, first with gestures and then with words.

 

Last Updated ( Friday, 05 February 2010 04:31 )  

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