Dr. Mary Barbera provides advice on how to stop crying in children with autism. Watch and learn how to deal with autism fits and tantrums.
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Crying is common in children with autism and without autism. Regardless though, many parents ask, “why is my child crying?” Crying problem behaviors usually always correlate with demands being too high and reinforcement being too low. When a child is crying, it’s almost never a good idea to ignore the crying and continue to place demands on the child. Many parents don’t know how to handle screaming, or how to handle crying in toddlers and tend to act in a way that only worsens the problem behavior.
Crying should not be something that we accept as part of autism, or in any child. If a child is crying, there is going to be little to no motivation from them to stop crying if demands don’t change. That’s why today’s video I’m outlining steps you can take to resolve crying in kids with autism.
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Dr. Mary Barbera. I fell into the autism world as an autism mom in 1999 when her first-born son, Lucas, was diagnosed with autism. Since then, she became a Board-Certified Behavior Analyst and best-selling author of The Verbal Behavior Approach. Since 2015, she’s created 3 autism online courses based on applied behavior analysis for professionals and "gung-ho" parents. Whether you’re looking for autism parenting strategies, working with development delays in children, or in search of autism help for professionals, I can encourage you to subscribe to the channel and join me on my journey. I’ll be providing weekly autism resources that you don’t want to miss.
6 май 2020