Feb 05
Posted: under communication, disability issues, education, employment, interventions, life on the spectrum, parenting, sensory processing, socialization.
Tags: advocacy, autism, communication, flexibility, independence, initiative, motivation, sensory processing, social skills, teaching February 5th, 2010
You’ve probably heard of this movie. If not, or if, having heard of it, you had reservations about it (I did), here’s the good news: it’s better than you think. It’s an incredible, brilliant movie that shows Temple Grandin’s triumph over both the problems autism gave her, and the society that did not have a […] [...more]
You’ve probably heard of this movie. If not, or if, having heard of it, you had reservations about it (I did), here’s the good news: it’s better than you think. It’s an incredible, brilliant movie that shows Temple Grandin’s triumph over both the problems autism gave her, and the society that did not have a clue and did not believe autistic people had a future. And it shows the value of her life’s work, her designs for livestock management. Because of her, half the livestock facilities in the world–not just here–handle their stock more humanely. And–(yes, there’s more) it shows how she thinks–because it is a visual medium, a movie can show the pictures she thinks with. Read the rest of this entry »
Sep 16
Posted: under education, parenting.
Tags: college, downs and ups, progress, teaching, testing September 16th, 2009
Our son’s been increasingly interested in getting more education, for the very practical reason of earning more money…having the part-time job has taught him that he’s unlikely to ever make enough to live on from it, even if it were full-time. So we took him to the nearest city’s community college to find out what […] [...more]
Our son’s been increasingly interested in getting more education, for the very practical reason of earning more money…having the part-time job has taught him that he’s unlikely to ever make enough to live on from it, even if it were full-time.
So we took him to the nearest city’s community college to find out what was available. Very sensibly, they insist on all incoming students (not just ones who have special ed and resource courses in their high school transcript) taking their assessment test. I had been encouraging him to read and write something every day, and he had been, but what with my own work I hadn’t been teaching him. We had hopes he would do well, at least on the math part of the test.
He didn’t.
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Feb 04
Posted: under communication, interventions, life on the spectrum, opinion, parenting.
Tags: autism, behavior analysis, sensory processing, teaching February 4th, 2009
Uneven development across various cognitive domains is more common than most people realize, but people with autism usually show extreme unevenness. Anyone working with autistic children needs to be aware of these extremes–and mapping developmental levels in each domain can help target interventions to that particular child’s actual needs. These interventions should not be aimed […] [...more]
Uneven development across various cognitive domains is more common than most people realize, but people with autism usually show extreme unevenness. Anyone working with autistic children needs to be aware of these extremes–and mapping developmental levels in each domain can help target interventions to that particular child’s actual needs. These interventions should not be aimed at raising the child’s gaps to equal his talents–or stifling the talents to the level of the gaps. Instead, the goal should be to scaffold progress in each domain from where the child actually is, at the best rate that the child can manage in each.
I learned this first as a tutor, coming in to rescue a child who had started failing in a subject or had some other problem. To do my job, I needed to find out what the child knew, what the child thought he/she knew, and what had gone wrong–as fast as possible and while building a working relationship with that child.
How do you approach this problem? It starts with careful, precise observation of the child’s current behaviors in each domain. Big sheets of graph paper help both the mapping and charting progress. An ordinary “baby book” that gives general information about normal development allows parents to do at least a rough approximation themselves.
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