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Teaching Social Skills
Steps for Teaching Social Skills
1. Activate Background Knowledge
- What is the skill? What does it look like and sound like? How do we define it?
- Discuss the skill with students and allow them time to turn/talk about what it means for them.
- Identify the importance of the skill and the rationale for teaching it.
2. Direct Teaching
- Identify the concrete, discrete steps of the skill.
- Directly teach the steps of the skill.
3. Model the Steps
- Modeling can be defined as telling paired with sharing.
- Illustrate the steps of the skill using examples and non-examples.
- End with the "right way" to use the skills.
4. Practice the Skill
- Allow students time to practice the skill.
- Check their accuracy with the skill and provide feedback to improve their performance. Always provide another practice opportunity if they perform the skill incorrectly.
- Typically, students practice the skill in a safe, controlled setting until they are accurate with the skill. Then, they can perform/practice the skill in the natural setting.
- Students can role-play the skill and list the steps of the skill as they use them.
5. Transfer and Generalize the Skills
- Precorrect, prompt, and reinforce the skills at every reasonable opportunity.
- Provide behavior-specific praise in order to provide feedback to students and to strengthen the skill.
- Use misbehavior or misuse of a skill as a teaching opportunity, not just an opportunity to punish.
- Maintain a high ratio of positive to negative feedback (e.g., at least 4:1).
Correcting Use of Skills
For minor, infrequent behavior:
- Identify the misbehavior.
- Identify the correct behavior.
- Ask the student to perform the behavior. Model the behavior if the student does not know the correct behavior.
- Praise the student for the correct behavior.
- Move on with day.
For more frequent or more severe behavior:
- Identify the misbehavior.
- Identify the correct behavior.
- Prove more extensive teaching and modeling of the behavior using examples and non-examples.
- Provide time for student to practice the behavior.
- Within the natural setting, prompt the expected behavior and praise the student after the correct behavior is performed.
References
Gresham, F. M. (2002). Teaching social skills to high-risk children and youth: preventive and remedial strategies. In M. R. Shinn, H. M. Walker, & G. Stoner (Eds.), Interventions for academic and behavior problems II: Preventive and remedial approaches (pp. 403-432). Bethesda, MD: National Association of School Psychologists.
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