

Public schools + technology = autism education
I will never forget the day three years ago when a previous ABA therapist had called a meeting to discuss Jackson’s progress – or lack thereof. She was blunt and somewhat condescending when she said, “We’re afraid Jackson might shut down and never talk again.” I felt like the wind had been knocked right out of me.
Jackson was diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) when he was almost 2 years old, but he wasn’t always nonverbal. At 11 months old, he could say words like “Mommy,” “Daddy” and “SpongeBob.” It wasn’t until after his first birthday that he started losing his speech. In fact, we didn’t hear Jackson say a single word again until he was 5 years old, that breakthrough brought on by intense Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) therapy.
The flood gates opened, and he could repeat endless words such as “apple” and “bubble.” As we shaped his speech, he was even starting to use two-word sentences. Sadly, that therapy center closed, and we watched in frustration as Jackson regressed at his next two therapy centers, losing his consonants along with his desire to speak.
So it was with some frustration and anger that I listened to a therapist put such limits on Jackson’s potential after a regression that had happened on her watch. She wanted us to buy a speech machine. She wanted me to pay the expenses and salaries for developers to fly in and teach her staff how to use it.
The machine alone would cost us almost $8,000.
Fortunately,
I had a meeting at Caddo Parish’s Summerfield Elementary School with
our assistive technology for communications coordinator, Paula Huckabee.
She is also a board-certified licensed speech and language pathologist.
We were desperate to give Jackson a voice, and as I explained to her
what we were considering, she told me about NikiTalk.
NikiTalk
is a digital-based communication app for touch devices created by a
software developer named Alessandro La Rocca, whose own daughter,
Nicoletta, had struggled to communicate. “There is always a lot of
sincerity and generousness when a parent develops something,” Huckabee
said.
“The thing I love about NikiTalk is that I can customize and create the
pages based on the students’ highly preferred items and how they like to
participate.
Some of the other programs are too overwhelming, like driving a Cadillac when still trying to learn to ride a tricycle.”
For
the price of an $85 app and an iPad, Jackson could carry an accessible,
less-bulky, less-stigmatizing form of communication that actually helps
build language, not abandon it altogether. Ironically, NikiTalk
encourages Jackson to try to say his words again because he’s more
confident in his own ability to communicate his needs.
Jackson
used Niki- Talk in the classroom, mainly at snack time for a good year
before he ever picked it up independently. His teacher and
paraprofessionals would have to prompt him by sticking it in front of
him before he was given his favorite pretzels and chips. Jackson would
have to select the different icon images and build sentences with them,
such as “I want,” “to eat” and “pretzels.” But he still wasn’t
independently picking up his iPad to speak.
Until one day I dropped him
off at school and told his teacher, “He seems kind of off today. He may
not be feeling well. I just have no way of knowing because he can’t tell
me what hurts. Call me if you want me to come get him.”
I
was just walking in the door back at home, when I got a breathless
phone call from his teacher. “I just had to call you,” she said, the
emotion clearly evident in her voice. “Jackson heard what you said, and
he walked straight into the classroom, picked up the iPad and said, ‘I
don’t feel well. Something hurts. Head. Ear.’” We laughed through our
tears together, and you’d better believe I went right back, checked him
out of school and drove him to the doctor. And as always, once Jackson
“got it,” he never looked back. He began using NikiTalk to communicate
independently every day.
Anyone
can download NikiTalk on his or her phone or iPad, but it is our
experience with the small autism program at Caddo Parish Schools that
has been truly amazing. Our team’s level of knowledge in teaching kids
on the autism spectrum, combined with their level of commitment and
willingness to go the extra mile, is a story that I think needs to be
told. We would never have found this app without them. They have given
Jack a voice.
“You
have to be aware of the natural, teachable moment,” Huckabee said. “The
goal in these classrooms is to get children to actively participate in
activities based on instruction. I try to find what symbol is the most
meaningful for them. Jackson had started off with a symbol-exchange
format, something that the classroom likes. His most meaningful symbol
was a picture of a Whataburger sign versus some black-and-white line
drawing of fries. If drawings are too abstract for him, it’s too
difficult. The visual representation and visual motor is such a
strength. Once the symbol turns it on for them, they can process that
like, ‘who’da thought it?’ That is the power of symbols.”
NikiTalk is only limited by our ability to identify the
scope of Jack’s wants and needs, then arrange those images in the right
places on his iPad. Last year when we were going through some
heartbreaking, nighttime crying episodes, I told his teacher that we
wished we knew why he was crying. She came to my house during her
Christmas break, and we sat at our home computer and created a section
called “I am … crying because …” We then added all the reasons we could
think of for why Jackson might be crying using pictures, such as
“something hurts,” “it’s time for a snack,” “I need a breathing
treatment” and “I don’t like that noise.” Then we created choices within
some of those tabs.
I
cannot tell you the relief that comes with empowering a nonverbal child
to “tell us” why he is crying. But the real story here is the team of
professionals we have working with Jack and the lengths they will go to
help him learn and become independent. For many kids who don’t get
private therapy, the public school system is the only professional
autism help they get at all.
I
knew we had hit a home run when our new ABA team completely embraced
NikiTalk, not to replace verbal speech but to help build it. Our teacher
and private therapists have even met face to face to discuss our
approach for Jackson and make sure we’re all on the same page. We now
have the perfect storm of education for Jackson.
“Teamwork
makes the dream work,” Huckabee said. “It takes teachers and paras, you
and us. We are moving in the direction we’re supposed to move so he can
grow.”
– Susan Reeks