TEACHING SOCIAL SKILLS "FRONTWARDS"
By Dan Coulter
Copyright 2004 – All Rights Reserved
Why do we tend to teach manners backwards? Instead of consistently teaching
our kids social skills, many of us wait until they do something wrong and
then correct them.
Imagine using this approach in a driver's education class. They'd put you
in a manual transmission car with no training. Then they'd turn on the
engine and shove the car into the street, expecting you to learn to drive
from the helpful suggestions yelled at you by other drivers.
Anybody think that's an optimal learning situation?
To give us parents the benefit of the doubt, we don't use poor teaching
tools on purpose. We do what seems obvious at the time. But, looking back,
I'm sort of amazed that I kept trying the same thing for so long when it
wasn't getting results.
Even though I knew my son had Asperger Syndrome and that he had trouble
learning social skills intuitively, for years I still tried to teach him by
"correcting" him after the fact. Or rather, instead of teaching him, I
corrected him. And got exasperated when he committed the same
transgressions over and over again.
Well, I finally learned that if a door is locked, you have to try another
one. In this case, the other door is explaining and demonstrating a social
skill and having your kids practice it before they need it. And it pays
off.
A little while back, I introduced my 20-year-old son to another adult. My
son said, "How do you do?" He made eye contact and listened to what the
person said -- and never once mentioned Star Wars. He even said, "It was
nice to meet you," before he left. I thought back to ten years ago...when
this conversation seemed like an impossible goal. But who was it impossible
for? Once I tried the right door, the skill came through.
People with Asperger Syndrome can learn manners and social skills. Of
course, how much they learn depends partly on their individual challenges
and abilities. But it also depends on how we teach the lessons we want them
to absorb.
I have a friend who tells a story about her son using a "script" he'd
learned in social skills class when he happened to be seated next to a
younger child on an airplane. As the mother of a child with AS, my friend
was understandably nervous about how this would work out. It worked out
great, because her son asked the other child a series of questions --and
listened to the answers.
Hi, what's your name? What grade are you in? What's your favorite subject?
Etc.
My friend knew this was a prepared script, but for the other child, it
worked as a natural conversation. It helped the child with Asperger
Syndrome interact in a comfortable way with another person - and it
hopefully was a step toward helping the son learn more about conversation
and preparing him to depart from the script.
Many of the manners and social skills we want our kids with Asperger
Syndrome to learn can be taught, but we need to teach and practice these
skills "frontwards," before they're needed. And practice is a key to
success. A little regular practice time can help embed social skills so
they become second nature to our kids.
There's no adequate way to describe how you feel when you see your son or
daughter demonstrate good manners in the real world with no prompting from
you.
Sometimes things are only temporarily impossible.
© Dan Coulter 2004.
Reprinted with Permission

Dan Coulter is the writer/producer of the video, "MANNERS FOR THE REAL
WORLD - Basic Social Skills." His website is:
www.coultervideo.com.