NAUGHTY OR NICE
or
WHEN MISBEHAVIOUR IS ACTUALLY
AN ATTEMPT TO COMMUNICATE
or
WHEN MISBEHAVIOUR IS ACTUALLY
AN ATTEMPT TO COMMUNICATE
Intention … I stop to think about this
word. What exactly is “intention”? It’s an aim or plan. Intentional means deliberate – “misbehaviour”
indicates underlying intentions. Just as
a two year old is labeled going through the “Terrible Twos” some special needs
children are labeled as “misbehaving”.
When a two year old is throwing a
tantrum it is a huge message that she is frustrated because no one seems to
understand what she needs. Sometimes
all she wants is someone to acknowledge her feelings. When a special needs child starts shouting or
hitting it is a huge message, “I want to tell you something and I don’t know
how!”
If you have a spouse or a teenager you know
how frustrating it is when you can’t communicate and understand each
other. Sometimes our brains are just
wired differently for communicating and understanding. Imagine being a special needs person who has
no way at all to communicate at all.
What strength they must have to keep trying to connect and communicate!
To simplify – in order to bang a nail
into a board you need some sort of tool whether it is a hammer or a rock. In order to communicate, you must have the
tools as well - whether it is talking, using sign language, using pictures or
electronics. You need something! Even just “yes” and “no” makes a difference.
The Stories
Nina
Nina was a grade one student who was diagnosed with
global delay and had drop seizures. She had some verbal skills when
she was younger but had lost them before she started coming to school. Nina would strike out at anyone near her if
she was angry or had a drop seizure.
After Nina recovered from a drop seizure, there were times when she would
actually crawl towards me to hit me.
Sometimes
Nina would strike out when there seemed to be no reason or trigger. Even before I looked into what the triggers
were, I needed to give her a way to express herself without hitting. I used a modified gesture of “go way” in sign
language. I took both her hands and moved them toward me and said, “Go
away.” The motion for her would be moving
two hands away from her body. Nina
responded quickly. She started taking my
hands and moving them towards me when she wanted me to go away. I think she understood the gesture as pushing
my hands away rather than moving her hands in a forward motion. I was
with her for about 6 years and throughout that time she continued to take
someone’s hands to do the gesture. I
don’t know if she would have eventually learned to do the gesture without
touching hands. What was important was
that she had a way to communicate. The
amount of “misbehaviour” dropped – not totally but it was a start.
The next step was to add a gesture for
“stay here”. This came from Nina
herself. One day as she was sitting on
the floor, she patted the floor. I said,
“Stay here. You want me to stay
here.” She tapped the floor again. I understood.
What comes next? We added a
gesture for “done” and a few others.
These were fine for simple needs but what about choices and finding out
what Nina could learn?
The easiest way to make a choice is a
simple “yes” or “no”. That opens the
door for so much more especially choices.
I can’t remember who had the idea but between the support teacher and
myself we decided to give Nina a way to say, “yes” and “no”. We used picture symbols –
a face with a
smile for “yes” and a face with a frown for “no”.
For Nina, this was just a
beginning. The frustration and striking
out became less and less. She still
would strike out after a drop seizure so we gave her some space and time to
feel settled before we expected her to get up.
There were times when we couldn’t give her time to settle - when there
was danger or an emergency such as a fire drill, it took two of the staff to
help her move. Explaining what we had to
do only upset her more. It always bothered me that we had to take away her
right to her own needs but her safety came first.
* It always makes a difference to ask
yourself, “Why is this happening? What is causing this behaviour?”