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We Need Answers on Rapid Prompting Method Once and For All!
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Sponsor: The Autism Site
We've waited years for research into the Rapid Prompting Method. It's time to take action!
Rapid Prompting Method (RPM) is a teaching method invented by Soma Mukhopadhyay. Specifically meant for nonverbal autism, it involves constantly prompting a student to keep them focused on the matter at hand.[1]
Perhaps most astoundingly, however, it supposedly leads to communication. By spelling out words on a letter board, it has allegedly unlocked the minds of individuals with nonspeaking autism, allowing them to freely express thoughts they were once unable to verbalize. RPM assumes that these individuals have average or even above-average intelligence but are impeded by issues like apraxia and sensory overload.[1] Quite a contrast from our current, generalized view of people with nonverbal autism — that they lack understanding and cognitive abilities.
If RPM really does do what it claims to do, the implications are unimaginable. Intelligent people locked within themselves, unable to communicate anything more than basic needs, stuck in classes that teach them the alphabet and numbers one through ten, could be freed from cages of silence, frustration, and boredom. This would benefit not only them but humanity as well.
Here’s the problem, though: we don’t know for sure if RPM really leads to communication because no one has studied it.
The reason? Some say it’s a rebranded form of Facilitated Communication (FC)[2] — a product of the 90’s in which a facilitator supported the hands of nonverbal individuals as they typed on a keyboard. This communication method has been largely debunked and branded pseudoscientific,[3] as research discovered facilitators were unconsciously manipulating the subjects.
Yet proponents of RPM say that there are vital differences between them. RPM does not make use of physical touch, and, most significantly, many individuals who learn to communicate through RPM are eventually able to type independently.[4]
There’s no telling which side is correct because, aside from one small study that didn’t even study RPM’s communication claims,[5] we have no thorough, peer-reviewed literature evaluating the method’s efficacy. So we have two sides going back and forth over something we don’t even objectively know about for sure.
Enough is enough! We need answers, not just for the sake of scientific advancement but also for the sake of people with nonspeaking autism and their families. Could RPM change the lives of some people with autism, or is it simply a waste of time and money? There’s only one way to find out.
Tell the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) to conduct or support a solid, peer-reviewed research study on RPM. For the sake of people with nonverbal autism, we need to know the truth once and for all.