ABA – the incredible 5 point scale
[From a couple of years back]
For Scribbit’s Write Away Context.
My incoherent speech delayed youngest son howls at me.
Not a mellow yellow, more of a fire breathing red. How I long for the calming, cool waters of green.
His words, if they are words, are so distorted that I can't make out their meaning?
He's at full volume, [Level 10, where level 1 would constitute a whisper] caused by inferior milk temperatures. I make a mental note to summarily dismiss the cook. ABA save me! [Not the American Bar Association, Bankers, Basketball, Booksellers nor Birding.]
I hear the dulcet Irish tones of ABA guru [The Applied Behavioral Analysis chappie ] float over me; “and what is the functionality of the particular behavior exhibited?” Haven't the foggiest notion right now, unless it's to drive me completely batty, in which case, he is exceeding expectations. “We need to figure out the function of the behavior. Is it for attention or a tangible outcome, is he avoiding or escaping something, has this become a ritual (self stimulatory behavior)?”
This kind of language to the parent of the newly diagnosed!
Probably, all of the above at this stage, but who knows? Certainly not me, especially when the noise level is high enough to make the few brain cells I have left fuse together.
What is the cure for autism? All I can think of is ear plugs or protectors, for coping not curing.
When he was born in the hospital, the nurse said he was the loudest she'd ever heard. I thought she was joking. They should never have let me leave the maternity ward without ear muffs at the very least. Expelled and ejected from the hospital in a wheel chair, swaddled baby, ear muffs and 96 degree heat.
“I am having a bad day!” he manages to bellow.
Horray!
Coherent speech. You and me both, matey.
It is at moments like this that I want a time machine to whiz me back a couple of decades so that I can change careers to something more useful. There again, I've already been fired from my post as cook.
I reach over for his 5 point scale, [see Ref 1] and rub his back with my other hand until I can persuade him to glance at me. He obliges me with a quick flit of the pupils to see it in my hand. I point to the five, the red square which indicates to him that I know that he's in the middle of an explosion. This is to help him recognize that what he is currently experiencing, is a five, that this is what it feels like to be exploding. This is sometimes called bio feedback. [Ref 1 Psychobabble]
I use no words, and neither does he. This is more effective. Speech can be a dreadful impediment to effective communication. After a few more minutes, the noise dissipates as I rub his back.
I point to the four, orange, as he gradually comes down the scale. As he sits up from the floor the noise actually stops. He points to the three, yellow. I encourage him to take deep tummy breaths, called stomach breathing.
I flip my finger between two and three, as I'm not sure where he is? He helps me by pointing to the 2, blue. I tell him that we're going to clean him up now, and fetch a tepid wet flannel, to wipe his face. We avoid the tricky areas of nose blowing, as well as eye dabbing, to ensure that we don't inadvertently provoke an additional meltdown. I have learned that anything that might loosely be described as a 'cavity' on this child, is a 'no go' area. But that's because Brits are 'medically challenged.'
We spend an additional seven minutes tinkering with the milk temperature, if not calmly, at least without the screams. Eventually, I get it right. He sucks his hot [ 1 minute and 7 seconds in the microwave] chocolate milk through a straw. His delicate little mouth shuns the texture of the lip of a cup. It also has the fringe benefit of free therapy, by practicing his lip closure. His fingers avoid contact with the cup and the straw. Hands free beverage consumption. Now there's a skill I didn't know existed? One tentative and brave digit, reaches out to brush the 1, green. Hallelujah!
Ref 1 – I am unsure if it's acceptable to mention the 'Incredible Five Point Scale' or whether that constitutes 'flagrant advertising' resulting in carnage to the blogging system? [translation = please advise?]
Ref 2 – Psychobabble – phrases and terminology used effortlessly and accurately by all American persons from birth onwards, but the rest of the world finds
A] incomprehensible
B] laughable
C] tune out
D] any / all / none of the above
I apologise for any stray ‘u’s that I may have missed.
Ignore the zeds.
























November 11th, 2006 at 6:45 pm
You are a good mommy.
God bless.
November 12th, 2006 at 2:07 am
Hi there!
Sometimes when my son is headed for meltdown mode, I and everyone around have to stop talking. The more he hears words the worse it gets. I sure do understand the not using words:)
Have a great day!
November 12th, 2006 at 2:44 am
“use no words, and neither does he. This is more effective. Speech can be a dreadful impediment to effective communication.” I could not agree more. Sometimes it is like that. This probably was not your intent but I found myself cheering you along through the stages. I have heard of/used the 5 point scale but have never seen the visual scale you show in your pic. It seems a lot more tangible for kids to have the strip with colors than for adults to list what they think on a piece of paper.
November 12th, 2006 at 8:26 am
If I ever use any psychobabble, please flame me!
Glad to see someone else thinks ABA could mean somthing else.
Your description (in discrete segments) captures just how it feels.
November 12th, 2006 at 11:51 am
My entire paper I’m writing is on the benefits of ABA. I was going to do a contrast between ABA and Floortime, but realized I couldn’t do it since Floortime hardly has any empircal research. That pretty much sums up my attitude on Floortime, btw.
November 15th, 2006 at 2:38 pm
Thanks! for posting on ABA. Your post and others are really helping me understand how its being used with kids with autism, and how helpful it can be. It’s eye opening.
September 3rd, 2008 at 7:48 am
Oh I love this–learned something completely new today.
Thanks for the glimpse you’ve shared, this is excellent!
September 19th, 2008 at 5:46 am
amazing post! communicating with colors is brilliant! thanks for sharing!
September 19th, 2008 at 6:17 pm
color-coded mood charts – or five point scales – are so valuable! I use them at school when the situation calls for self-evaluation.