Capture your Child’s Attention to Promote Learning
In order for learning to take place, a child must first be able to attend to the environment and to people. Most of a child’s early learning takes place through, watching, and listening. Children with autism do not demonstrate an adequate level of attention to people, as this does not appear to be inherently motivating for them. When a child does not naturally enjoy interactions and is not hard wired to learn through this crucial channel, they will not attend to the movements, gestures, facial expressions, and words of others; subsequently, their learning will be detrimentally impacted.
There is a lot that you can do to promote your child’s ability to attend to people. Identify what your child is naturally interested in and motivated by. It could be an object or the way an object is used, or it could be physical activities such as roughhousing or running. Meet your child where he is at in his favorite activity and use this as the window for learning. Even an unusual or repetitive activity, such as spinning in circles or lining up toy cars, can be a starting point from which to build a play repertoire. Find ways of interjecting yourself into these activities and turning them into a meaningful interaction. For a child who spins in circles, you may hold his hands and play games of Ring Around the Rosie. A child who is fixated on lining up cars may be open to you lining up blocks around the cars and making a garage. If met with resistance, you may alternatively try to find ways to capture attention away from the cars. A game of tickles might break the child’s fixation on cars just long enough to have a short back and forth interaction with a caregiver.
Position yourself face to face with your child as often as possible, whether it is during mealtimes, play routines, or looking at books. During snack time, offer small portions and wait for your child to make eye contact with you before providing more. Fill your child’s cup just a little and hold it within his sight but just out of reach so that he will have to signal to you in some way that he wants it. Building in ways to capture your child’s attention during daily routines will set into place the necessary groundwork to promoting learning.
Working With Autism is located at 16530 Ventura Blvd, Suite 5101 in Los Angeles. For more information, please call 818-501-4240 and visit www.workingwithautism.com.
ADVERTISE WITH US
WiSH Education Foundation’s WiSH Upon A Car Showcase Saturday, May 16, 2026
WiSH Upon a Car Showcase returns once again on Saturday, May 16th, 6-9pm in the Citrus Street parking lot at Valencia Town Center. This fundraising event benefits the WiSH Education Foundation and features hot rods, classics, customs, trucks, muscles, exotics...
Santa Clarita Valley’s Salvation Army Corps’ 3rd Annual Donut Day Friday, June 5, 2026
Get ready for a sweet and exciting showdown at the 3rd Annual Donut Day, hosted by the Santa Clarita Valley Salvation Army Corps! This highly anticipated event will take place on Friday, June 5, at 3:00 p.m. at the Newhall Community Center (22421 Market...
Child & Family Center Launches PEARLS Program to Support Older Adults Experiencing Depression and Isolation
Child & Family Center is proud to announce the launch of its PEARLS program — Program to Encourage Active, Rewarding Lives — expanding the Center’s longstanding commitment to supporting the whole family across generations.For 50 years, Child & Family...
ABOUT THE MAGAZINE
Santa Clarita Magazine has set a high standard for excellence in advertising for over 36 years. A family owned and operated business, Santa Clarita Magazine has grown with the Santa Clarita Valley since 1990 and become the #1 place to advertise locally.
FOLLOW US
SANTA CLARITA MAGAZINE
PO Box 801570
Valencia Ca 91380
For Advertising information
Call or Text: 1 (661) 294-4444



