How are social skills best taught?
Social skills, deficits or problems can be viewed as errors in learning; therefore, the appropriate skills need to be taught directly and actively. It is important to base all social skill instructional decisions on individual student needs. In developing a social skill curriculum it is important to follow a systematic behavior change plan. During assessment of a student’s present level of functioning, two factors should be addressed. First, the teacher must determine whether a social skill problem is due to a skill deficit or a performance deficit. The teacher can test the student by directly asking what he or she would do or can have the student role play responses in several social situations (e.g., “A peer on the bus calls you a name. What should you do?”) If the student can give the correct response but does note display the behavior outside the testing situation, the social skill problem may be due to a skill deficit. More direct instruction may be required to overcome the skill