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Teaching Joint Attention to Children: Evidence-Informed Best Practices

Teaching Joint Attention to Children: Evidence-Informed Best Practices 1

What is Joint Attention?

Joint attention, the ability to share attention with another person towards an object, activity or event, is a crucial skill for social development and learning. For the pupilI work with it is a crucial skill to teach. For some joint attention skills do not develop naturally and needs to be taught directly. We need to show our pupils the value of attending to the planned learning we have devised.

As Special Education (SEN) teachers we can implement evidence-based strategies to effectively teach joint attention. In this post we will talk about some of the most effective techniques. The studies linked in the references section all mention two things we need to be mindful of. Some children will initiate more joint attention activities, others will respond to direction to share attention. Most studies focus on overt signs of attention. Not all pupils we work with will show they are attending to something in a neurotypical way.

How do Children Develop Joint Attention

Butterworth and Jarrett (1991) conducted research on the development of joint attention in infants through interactions with their caregivers. They found that infants go through three stages in the process.

  1. Ecological stage (6 to 9 months old): Infants in this stage do not have the ability of joint attention. They tend to focus on interesting objects within their field of view, regardless of the direction of the caregiver’s gaze.
  2. Geometric stage (12 months old): In this stage, infants begin to understand joint attention. They track the direction of the caregiver’s gaze and look at the same object that the caregiver is looking at. However, this gaze-following behavior occurs only when the object is observed within the infant’s field of view.
  3. Representational stage (18 months old): In the final stage, infants acquire the ability of joint attention. They can turn their attention towards the object that the caregiver is looking at, even if it is outside their initial field of view. They can represent and understand the caregiver’s perspective.
Joint Attention Stages (Butterworth and Jarrett cited in Nagai etal)

What are the most effective techniques for teaching joint attention?

Focus on motivation.

Use highly motivating toys, objects or activities to capture the student’s interest. Things that make noise, light up or move in surprising ways are particularly good for teaching joint attention. Pair the motivating item with verbal cues like “Look, see!” or “What have I got here?” using the task bag idea. to direct the student’s attention. I think that this kind of activity is much more valuable and legitimate than a twinkl worksheet. Provide positive reinforcement in the pupils preferred style when they engage. Seeing you or a peer play can be more motivating than being told to.

Use prompting.

Physically prompt the student by gently guiding their hand or pointing to turn their attention to the object. Then provide verbal prompts like “Look!” as you point to the object. Slowly fade out the physical prompts over multiple sessions. Prompting, especially when combined with positive reinforcement of joint attention, has been shown to be very effective. If you are interested in physical prompt and ways to use it have a read of our hand-over-hand post.

Model the behavior.

Explicitly model looking back and forth between the object and the student. Model phrases like “Wow, look at that” while pointing between the object and the student. Then prompt the student to do the same. Then you can carry out the action

Repeat and practice.

Provide multiple opportunities for the pupil to practice joint attention with different people, objects and activities. Repeat the motivations, prompts and modelling over many short sessions, rather than a single long session. With regular practice of just 2-3 minutes at a time you can increase the likelihood of the pupil attending to your planned activity. Joint attention should never be forced if they are not interested try again, try something different, try a different time, reduce distractions etc.

What toys and activities are good for teaching joint attention?

Simple Joint Attention Activities

Joint attention during a reading session. EYFS

Summary

Sorry I haven’t referenced this post fully. The papers that relate to Joint attention I have used are below. They would suggest that given the growing need in the field of education to identify factors that impact learning for young children, it seems valid to consider joint attention as a potentially important mediating factor in providing optimal attentional learning environments for preschool children. The ability to efficiently attend to both social cues and content being presented is a skill that successful learners exhibit.

References on Joint Attention Activities and Strategies

Akhtar, N., & Gernsbacher, M.A. (2007). Joint Attention and Vocabulary Development: A Critical Look. Language and linguistics compass, 1 3, 195-207 . Accessed Online May 2023

Butterworth, George & Jarrett, Nicholas. (2011). What Minds Have in Common is Space: Spatial Mechanisms Serving Joint Visual Attention in Infancy. British Journal of Developmental Psychology. Accessed Online May 2023

Kaplan, F., & Hafner, V.V. (2006). The challenges of joint attention. Interaction Studies, 7, 135-169. Accessed Online May 2023

Yukie Nagai , Koh Hosoda , Akio Morita & Minoru Asada (2003) A
constructive model for the development of joint attention, Connection Science, 15:4, 211-229, Accessed Online May 2023 – This has a good section but the main section talks about robots.

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