helping parents of disabled children
Back >>  
Facilitated Communication
Facilitated Communication

What is it?
Facilitated Communication (FC) was devised by an Australian, Rosemary Crossley, thirty years ago. Rosemary Crossley worked in an institution for people with severe disabilities. She asked a patient who had cerebral palsy to come and live with her and tried to find an alternative to speech in order to communicate with her. She wrote a book entitled "Annie's Coming Out", which is based on their experience. According to Rosemary Crossley, the difficulty that some disabled individuals have with language is not cognitive but due to the fact that they have a problem expressing themselves; as a result their intellectual skills tend to be underestimated but once they are able to communicate they often reveal unexpected understanding and academic skills. She believes that when individuals' communication skills improve they tend to become more confident and independent. She founded the DEAL Communication Centre in 1986. The charity based in Victoria, Australia, assesses individuals needs and tries to find some means of communication for people who have little or no speech; it also provides training for parents or carers.

How does it work?
The aim of FC is to help individuals with limited or no speech find other ways of communicating using Alternative and Augmentative Communication strategies (AAC). The technique involves gesture and body language such as pointing, eye gaze, touching or sound. A "facilitator" helps a child or adult by giving them physical support, for example holding their hand, wrist, forearm or finger while they point to objects, signs or letters or even type or write. Each session is individualised. After assessing the client, the "facilitator" chooses a specific type of communication or technique which is appropriate to the needs of the client:




-Graphics: pictures, drawings, abstract symbols, text


-Voice


-Sign language


-Gestures


-Speech


-Vocalisations


-Concrete objects touched or pointed to.





Various tools and devices may be used such as: alphabet or picture boards, mouth or headsticks, switches, keyboards or typewriters and synthesisers. Emotional support, for instance giving encouragement, also plays an important role in FC.


Conditions that may respond to FC
Autism


Brain damage


Cerebral palsy


Developmental delay


Down's syndrome


Speech impairment


What results can be expected?
FC is very controversial, Douglas Biklen, from the Facilitated Communication Institute at the Syracuse University in America, claims that "Facilitated Communication is not a cure for autism or other developmental disabilities...but a means of communicating". Opponents to the technique argue that the "facilitator" can influence or manipulate the users as they attempt to point or type and therefore do the communicating. Recent scientific studies have not been conclusive:



- Mostert MP. Facilitated communication since 1995: a review of published studies

J Autism Dev Disord 2001 Jun;31(3):287-313.

This review critiques and discounts the claims of two studies purporting to offer empirical evidence of FC efficacy using control procedures.



- Gorman BJ. Facilitated communication: rejected in science, accepted in court-a case study and analysis of the use of FC evidence under Frye and Daubert. Behav Sci Law 1999;17(4):517-541



For more research papers visit the following websites:

- http://soeweb.syr.edu/thefci/fcjrnl.htm
(Syracuse Institute)

- http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?CMD=&DB=PubMed



http://crow.open.ac.uk/education-and-languages/research/groups/chdlrg/cdmhsn/projects.htm:
Facilitated communication in Autism Andrew Grayson is completing the third year of a project on facilitated communication with adults with communication disabilities, involving the fine-grained analysis of video records.


Resources

Organisations



DEAL Communication Centre Inc.

538 Dandenong Road

Caulfield Victoria 3162

Australia

Tel: (0061) 3 9509 6324

http://www.deal.org.au



Facilitated Communication Institute

Syracuse University

370 Huntington Hall

Syracuse

New York

NY 13244-2340

USA

Tel: (001) 315 443 9657

http://soeweb.syr.edu/thefci




The National Autistic Society (NAS)

393 City Road.

London EC1V 1NG

Tel: 020 7833 2299

http://www.nas.org.uk/



The Light and Sound Therapy Centre

90 Queen Elizabeth's Walk

London N16 5UQ

Tel: 020 8880 1269

http://www.ldb.co.uk/autism.htm



YAACK (Augmentative and Alternative Communication Connecting Young Kids)

http://www.pediatricservices.com/prof/prof-30.htm





Books

These are some of the references that have been passed to us; the list is not
exhaustive. We have not necessarily read the books and cannot say how easy it
will be to get them.




- Crossley R. & Mc Donald A. (1980) Annie's coming out. Penguin Books



- Crossley R. (1994) Facilitated communication training. New York: Teachers College
Press.



- Crossley R. (1997) Speechless: Facilitated communication for people without
voices. New York: Dutton: 309 pp.



- Biklen D. (1993) Communication unbound. New York Teachers College Press.



- Biklen D., Saha N., Kliewer C. (1995) How teachers confirm the authorship of
facilitated communication: A portfolio approach. Journal of the Association for
Persons with Severe Handicaps, 20 (1) 45-46.



<< Back
 


Home | About Us | Search | Information Centre | Checklist | How You Can Help | Update Us | Donate | Contact Us

    Patrons:
Darcy Bussell O.B.E  •  Felicity Kendal C.B.E  •  Alastair Stewart OBE
Alan Titchmarsh M.B.E  •  Timothy Spall  •  Terry Waite CBE

The Henry Spink Foundation · c/o Montgomery Swann · Scotts Sufferance Wharf · 1 · Mill St · London SE1 2DE
e-mail:   Registered Charity No: 1055469

Disclaimer

Search Engine Optimisation by Virtualnet Marketing