Social Skills Therapy/Training Funding Guidelines
Social skills therapy/ training is structured programming in either
an individual or group format that primarily addresses significant deficits
in the following four areas:
Engagement and Awareness of Other People
Engagement and awareness of other people addresses the individual's ability
to engage or be engaged by others and his/her level of interest in
interacting with others.
Social Interaction Skills
Social interaction skills refers to a child’s engagement with
others. For those with deficits, the quality of the social engagement
may be
atypical, inappropriate, or immature.
Social Communication Skills
Social communication skills are both verbal and nonverbal. Nonverbal
skills include eye contact, the ability to point and wave, and
the ability to read other people’s nonverbal cues such as
of boredom or anger. Verbal skills include the ability to initiate
and sustain
a conversation, to use proper intonations, and to listen appropriately.
Play Skills
Play skills usually refers to a child’s ability to interact with
their peers (make and sustain friendships). It involves the development
of appropriate toy play, the ability to play in parallel with other
children, the ability to initiate play with peers and take turns, the
ability to
cooperate and collaborate in play, and the ability to use symbols and
imagination in play.
Standards and Criteria
- Social skills therapy/training
is generally appropriate for children ages two to twelve.
- The determination
of the frequency and duration of the service will depend on the severity
of social deficits and the types of other programming
and activities that are concurrently addressing the child’s social
deficits. Typically, social skills training outcomes can be achieved
in one to two sessions per week.
- Requests for services require an initial
review by the regional center psychologist. The review is intended
to ensure that services are appropriate
and do not duplicate other services being provided to the child.
- Services
to be authorized are based on a formal assessment that identifies specific
social skills objectives. A formal assessment is not required
for a time-limited program of ninety days or less.
- Services may be authorized
for up to one year.
- Reauthorization of services is dependent upon receipt
of a progress report from the provider which shows documented progress
and a review
by the regional center psychologist that recommends reauthorization.
ADOPTED BY BOARD OF DIRECTORS: NOVEMBER 20, 2002