Visual Supports

Read Let's Get Visual, by Brian S. Friedlander, Ph.D., an article on software for creating visual tools for children with autism and other developmental disorders.

Individuals with autism are often described as "visual learners" or "visual thinkers." In fact, Temple Grandin, a well-known speaker on, and an individual with, autism titled one of her better known books, Thinking in Pictures. My personal experience, while limited, has certainly shown this description to be accurate. I have found that the more I can move an activity from verbal to visual, the more successful my kids have been. But in addition to activities there are many aspects of a child's environment that can benefit from visual supports.

This certainly doesn't mean that I try to replace all the verbal elements of the child's environment with visual. The goal, certainly, is to have kids make a wide variety of responses to an equally wide variety of stimuli. Rather, I try to use visuals to support kids who may have trouble, either expressively or receptively, with spoken language. The hope would be, of course, that these visual supports would be faded out, or reduced to more typical levels, as the child becomes more successful in his environment, though some individuals may need such support for longer than others.

There is a wide array of visual supports that can be used in the home, at school, and in the community. Visual supports -- pictures, symbols, or printed words -- can broadly be divided into three categories based upon the need that the support is trying to fill.

Comprehension of language and social situations

Environmental Structure and Predictability

Communication