At the time of this test, John is considered 3 years, 2 months old.
Listed below are some of the highlights from the 12 page report:
Areas of concern defined by parents:
1.He needs to be taught certain things that other kids seem to pick up naturally
2. Demonstrates some echolalia (repeats the ends of some questions when asked)
3. Preoccupations with narrow areas of interest and focus (in phases)
examples: clocks, lining up cars, left-turn arrows, train tracks,& reading clothing tags
4. Frustration tantrums -- problems managing anger
5. Craves sensory stimuli (specifically with hands/touch, chew non-food items)
6. Trouble with eating (messy eater, prefers to use hands, overstuffs mouth)
Areas of concern Socially:
1. Limited eye contact
2. Unable to show comfort to others in distress
3. Some pretend play
4. mostly parallel play
Areas of Concern defined by Current Teachers:
1. Little Attention Span
2. Easily Destracted
3. Limited Spontaneous Speech
4. Limited to no interaction with other children
5. Loves sensory activities (finger painting, eating with hands, feet in sand)
6. Limited interest in classroom when given free time (lines up cars or 'reads' a book)
7. Delayed academically
8. No eye contact
Things the teachers did not notice:
1. No strange or odd preoccupations
2. No behavior problems
3. No transition tantrums
Observation In the Clinic over 2 observation days:
1. No tantrums or upsets
2. mild mannered
3. Reduced eye contact
4.quiet most of the time, with only one-word utterances
5. Poor intelligibility of speech
6. Fairly distractible, but was able to maintain focus if sitting on lap, bounced, or squeezed
Observation at School:
1. John did not remain on carpet square during storytime and had to sit on teacher's lap to maintain focus
2. Wandered room
3. Responded to yes/no questions
4. Kids lined up to wash hands, John consistently wandered out of line; needed re-direction
5. Food placed in front of him, told to wait, kept putting hands in spaghetti; needed to be reminded to wait multiple times
6. Facial expression blunted most of the time
7. Complied with verbal instruction but never made eye contact; appeared not to be paying attention, but would respond appropriately
8. Messiest eater in the class
9. After lunch, wandered over to line up cars
10. Wandered to book area, opened book, sat down, and "read" it
11. On playground, rode tricycle alone most of the time
12. Smiled at girl who climbed on "caboose" of tricycle
13. Stopped bike purposely to have 2 other girls crash into him; all giggled; John repeated again
14. Gravitated to outskirts of playground most of time
15. Seemed to be "in his own world"
ADOS test (Austim Diagnostic observation Schedule):
1. John responded to name by turning toward examiner
2. Poor eye contact; used eye contact to get the examiner to do something again
3. Showed some shared enjoyment with examiner, but not consistent; interested mostly in having sole control over a toy; needed to be re-engaged to play with examiner
4. Did not spontaneously give objects to examiner; but would comply after repeated requests
5. Could show functional use of toys when prompted but did not demonstrate any symbolic play on own
6. Did not initiate any social interactions, but did not mind the examiner playing alongside him
7. Produced single word utterances, most not intelligible
8. Showed only occasional, unusaual sensory behavior -- objects in mouth
9. According to ADOS, fell within the spectrum, but not autism, per se
GARS test completed by parents scored an 81 -- meaning "possibly" has autism
Other Tests Administered:
- DAS-II - Differential Ability Scales - Verbal & Non-Verbal Cognitive Development; John scored in the 66th percentile for Verbal Comprehension (average) and 58th percentile for Naming Vocabulary (also average); For the Non_verbal section, he scored in the average for Picture Similarities, but scored mildly impaired on Pattern Contruction; His total scores for this test was a 96, and fell within the average range (39th percentile)
- Although the examiner felt that the scores need to take in account that John had a very low attention span, needed frequent re-direction to the tasks at hand, cues to remind him to persist in his effort, prompting to consider the full range of answer chocies before responding, etc.
- PLS-4 - PreSchool Language Scale - measures comprehension and expressive language skills; John's auditory comprehension scored of that of a 2-year 11 month old child (average range for his age) Most advanced skills he showed was the ability to distinguish activities that were day from activities at night. He could understand picture analogies, identified objects, identified colors and common activities, understood quantitive concepts (one vs. all), and descriptive concepts (big vs. small) Could follow 2 step commands, but COULD NOT show spatial concepts (on, off, in, out of), pronouns (I, me, you) or negatives (show me the baby that is not crying) His scores resulted in that of a 2-year 8 month old, which is on the low average for his age range.
- VABS-II - Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale - questionnaire filled out by parents; day-to-day functioning;
- Communication scored low at 1 year 11 months;
- Expressive Language scored at 2 years, 10 months;
- Written Language was HIGH at 4 years, 3 months - able to recognize upper and lowercase alphabet, own written name in printed form;
- Daily Living Skills ---
- Personal Care-2 years 9 months,
- Domestic Care - 2 years, 2 months;
- Community Functioining HIGH at 4 years 5 months
- SOCIAL skills - low at 1 year, 7 months;
- Play behaviors -1 year, 10 months
- Coping - 2 years, 7 months
- Fine Motor - 3 years, 5 months
- Basic Language skills have caught up to low average-average range, he still shows delays in speech intelligibility, as well as in pragmatic use of language in social/communicative ways
- Delays in age-appropriate social and play behaviors
- Shows some atypical restricted and repetitive behaviors
- Falls short of Autism Diagnosis at this time
- However, meets criteria for PDD-NOS, Pervasive Developmental Delay, Not Otherwise Specified, otherwise known as "atypical autism"
- He has shown signs that intervention boosts his progress
1. Parents should request an IEP (Individulaized Educational Plan) from Bonita Unified School District based on this second opinion requesting:
- Placement in a classroom with a better teacher-to-student ratio than a typical educational classroom; Should have curriculum appropriate for average-range overall intellectual level, but with resources that meets his needs for supervision, assistance, difficulties for sustained attention, and facilitation for social activities OR in a regular classroom with a one-on-one aide
- John clearly needs speech therapy to address intelligibility and language pragmatics
- John should receive an OT evaluation to address sensory issues and motor skills concerns
3. Parents should seek additional play and social opportunities and instruction for John with peers close in age; John needs facilitation to initiate and sustain engagement with other children and verbal cues to help him play
4. Seek parent education and support services