It’s no secret that Stevie can be… difficult. And I’m being so very kind when I say this. Yesterday he threw such a tantrum leaving the park, that I literally had to drag him by his arms all the way to the car. And when we got to the car, I was so frustrated, I yelled “We are never going to the park again!!”
Yup, I was that mom. It may or may not have been the first time. No. Actually, let me reassure you, it certainly was not the first time. UGH. We’re looking at an average of 10 tantrums per day, over EVERY DAMN THING. So, with the help of his therapists, there are a few new things we are trying with Stevie to make transitions easier GOD IN HEAVEN, PLEEEEEASE. And you know I’ll try anything once. Well, not anything. But to help Stevie, we’ve done it all.
The first is using the timer on my phone to simply countdown to our next activity. 5 more minutes at the park, then we go eat lunch. 4 more minutes! 3 more minutes! Et cetera, et cetera. It hasn’t helped yet. Stevie just says “NO!” every time I give him the warnings. But I’m gonna stick with it. If Supernanny says it works, then by Jove, we will keep trying.
The second is using a visual schedule for the day. It took a little prep time, and it’s kind of ugly and rudimentary. Nothing cute or Pinterest-y about it. But we can call it a “prototype” for now, at least until we see if it works. Here’s how it’s done.
Mine had to be portable, since we are always on the go. But I think a large scale one would work quite well in the home too, maybe on some foam board.
Materials:
Instructions to make visual schedule:
To use a visual schedule:
I break down the day into 3 sections. 1) Morning 2) After school 3) After nap.
I show Stevie the things that are coming up on the schedule by sticking the icons to the clipboard. For instance, in the morning, I will have an icon for Breakfast, an icon for TV Time and an icon for School. When we are done with breakfast, he will remove the Breakfast icon and place it in the envelope, signaling him that we are all done and moving onto the next activity.
When I pick him up after school, I have the next set of icons ready on the clipboard. We remove the School icon and put it in the envelope. Then we move onto Outside Time, Lunch and Nap.
When he wakes up from his nap, I have the next set of icons ready. We remove the Nap icon and move on with the afternoon activities, which may include Toys, Outside Time (again), and his bedtime routine.
Get the idea? We are still very new at this, so I’m not even sure what I’m doing. Just following instructions from his therapists, hoping it helps. If it does or if it doesn’t, you’ll be sure to hear about it from me.
Has anyone else done this? Have you found success? Any tips you can give me?