Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ABA. hands down the most effective.
Not for PDA. May work for other profiles, but ABA is specifically excluded as a recommendation for PDA profile.
Anonymous wrote:ABA. hands down the most effective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What local resources (including therapy modalities and practices) have been helpful with your elementary PDA kids. I'm starting to wonder if we're going down the wrong path with traditional therapy for anxiety, but I really don't know. My child is engaging and lovely and social but also too smart to fall for traditional redirection and doubles down when she feels like she's under threat or being forced to face something uncomfortable.
We are in Northern Virginia.
What’s an example of feeling under threat?
Walking into a situation where there is a known source of anxiety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What local resources (including therapy modalities and practices) have been helpful with your elementary PDA kids. I'm starting to wonder if we're going down the wrong path with traditional therapy for anxiety, but I really don't know. My child is engaging and lovely and social but also too smart to fall for traditional redirection and doubles down when she feels like she's under threat or being forced to face something uncomfortable.
We are in Northern Virginia.
What’s an example of feeling under threat?
Anonymous wrote:ABA. hands down the most effective.
Anonymous wrote:What local resources (including therapy modalities and practices) have been helpful with your elementary PDA kids. I'm starting to wonder if we're going down the wrong path with traditional therapy for anxiety, but I really don't know. My child is engaging and lovely and social but also too smart to fall for traditional redirection and doubles down when she feels like she's under threat or being forced to face something uncomfortable.
We are in Northern Virginia.