Abstract
The applicability of teaching communication replacement behavior for challenging behavior has not been fully recognized by early interventionists Working With young children in their natural environments. This article describes hoW challenging routines for families can be converted into opportunities to teach communication skills and increase participation in family activities. A case description is presented to illustrate hoW routines-based intervention can extend the process and procedures of functional assessment and positive behavior support interventions to ongoing early intervention that facilitates increasingly more sophisticated communication skills. We demonstrate hoW communication skills can be targeted in an individualized fashion first as a replacement behavior serving the same function as the challenging behavior for the child and second to correspond to the interests and concerns of the family and child. This approach offers flexibility in applying a variety of effective intervention strategies Within a family-guided process.
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