Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Family Time

We spent a long weekend away, with the extended family.  It was nice to spend time with the family; it was funny to watch the ASD kids interacting with the typical kids ... or actually, for the most part, not interacting.  One cannot help but make some comparisons, but this time, it was not heart-wrenching.  Everyone was having a good time, there were no tantrums, and when someone needed quiet time, it was easy enough to withdraw to a more isolated space.


The six-year-old (NT) was spinning stories about having play-dates with alligators, in his house - laughing as he spoke.  It was infectious and funny ... and the ASD kids, while imaginative, would never have had that kind of imagination.  Conversation about how teachers are sometimes wonderful and sometimes seem not to know the child at all, thankfully cross all categories of kids.  The great teachers are golden; the bad ones, well ...


It's fun to watch the cousins, the older teenagers/young adults, starting to get to know each other as "real people."  Cousins who used to be "so far apart" in age are now becoming fairly contemporary.  They're finding their way, and making connections - some expected, some not.  Of course, the 16 year old Aspie, being the youngest of his generation (on both sides), has a bit of a harder time.  Having no real age peers, and little interest, he doesn't socialize much.  He spent a lot of time playing on a DS (hand-held video game), with the 8 year old (next generation down) who has PDD.  They are, in many ways, soul-mates.  They understand each other in ways that the other children do not understand them.  That, too, is fun to watch.  Sometimes I think that families with only one ASD child are really missing out, much the way that families with only one child are.  Children speak a "language" that adults have forgotten; ASD children speak a slightly different language, and they understand each other far better than they understand NT children, or than NT children generally understand them.


The older generation, the grandparents/great-grandparents, seemed not to notice the incredibly strange behavior that was sometimes in evidence.  That was all for the good - it meant that there was no need for explanations or apologies.  The next generation, my generation, was able to laugh at how oblivious they were - they, the schools (when it suited them), and anyone who liked to pretend that this was all in our heads ... and just then I was "sniffed" by way of greeting!  


Sometimes, even though family time can be stressful, it has its moments!

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Inclusion ... the Never-ending Discussion, but Where is the Real Conversation?

I attended a "training session" discussing the potential for allowing for increased inclusion in classrooms, in this case, providing ABA (applied behavioral analysis) services to autistic students in inclusion classrooms.  There was an interesting mix of people - lawyers, parents, advocates.  I'm not a strong advocate of inclusion - I certainly think it's a great goal for many children, but I don't think it's right for everyone.  I think it's a mistake to think that there's anything that's right for everyone, and the concept that the goal in education should be that everyone, no matter what, should be in the same setting ... it's wrong.

I was very put off by the attitude of the presenter.  She kept asking questions as if she was asking questions, but she thought they were "to make people think about their prejudices."  It never occurred to her that she was operating from her own set of prejudices.  She asked whether there was any service that could not be provided within the mainstream class.  I raised my hand and gave an example:  the autism support that is provided in a local elementary school includes a curriculum that addresses social thinking.  It is a curriculum that is provided to only the kids who need it, i.e. the ASD kids.  "Well, couldn't all the kids get it?"  "Sure, but they'd need 20 of the person who provides it, instead of one.  That's an expense that's not reasonable."  "Well, couldn't they train the classroom teacher to do it?"  "No."  She didn't like my answer.  This presenter's way of dealing with everything was to minimize the skill of the provider of the service, to minimize the challenges of the students involved, and to behave as if anyone could do it.  "It isn't rocket science," she said several times, about ABA.  She's right, it isn't rocket science.  But that doesn't mean that everyone is well-suited to doing it.  It also doesn't mean that everyone has the knack for doing it.  I didn't even have time to get into the fact that the way that ASD children learn these things is SO different from how NT kids learn it, that to teach it together would defy the very reason for having the curriculum for the ASD kids in the first place!

There was discussion about the "odd" phenomenon of concentrating children with certain disabilities in particular schools within a district.  I don't understand why this is odd.  People act like all kids with special needs can be taught with the same techniques.  This is not true.  Why would we NOT want teachers who are particularly skilled and experienced with certain populations to teach them?  Why would we want what this presenter kept referring to as "natural proportions?"  We don't look for doctors who have "natural proportions" of patients with rare disorders!  If someone has a rare disorder, they look for a specialist in that field.  When someone has a complex legal matter, one does not go to a general practitioner; nor does one go to a trusts and estates attorney if one has a torts case - even though the T&E attorney can learn the rules of evidence!  If someone has a rare learning disorder, why should they not have a teacher who is specialized in that specific area?

When I spoke to the presenter during the break, and told her of my experience with children who had been placed in private schools, and whose experience was that it was only in those private schools that they felt like they were actually included, she said she'd heard that from kids before ... yet, she was dismissive of the perspective.  How can we not pay attention to the kids who we are supposedly advocating for, if we say we are advocating on their behalf, for their benefit, and they are telling us that they feel excluded in the general education environment, and they do not feel stigmatized or otherwise "excluded" by being in a specialized school?  If they tell us that being with other students "like themselves," they find, for the first time, a sense of community, how can we not honor that?

One thing that occurred to me, after the training, and after my conversation with the presenter, was that the people who are coming up with some of these concepts must not be members of a minority group, of any kind.  How could anyone else come up with the idea of "natural proportions."  People from minority groups tend to congregate in particular areas so that they can form communities of "their own" within the larger community.  That's why there are "Little Italies" and "Chinatowns" and neighborhoods with various other ethnic identities.  If a particular ethnicity constitutes 1% of the national population, it is the rare member of that ethnic group who chooses to live in an area where they are that proportion of the population.  There is comfort in community.  If people look at any of the online communities, it is clear that this is true for many people with disabilities as well.  For many people with autism, finding out that "autism" is what explains so much of what has been puzzling about them (or their world) is a huge relief, and finding others who share this label is wonderful.

Maintaining "natural proportions" in the face of this, to me, makes no sense.  Why should a child with Asperger's be expected to never meet another child of about his age in school, who shares a similar diagnosis, because with a 1 in 100 ASD diagnosis level, and the functioning levels being widely varied, the chances of having a true peer is minimal.  That is not fair to the children, the teachers, or the support staff.  

So much needs to be weighed, but it seems like those who advocate for inclusion are not listening to any of the reasons why sometimes, sometimes, there are valid considerations for thinking beyond pure, total inclusion as the "gold standard."


Friday, June 4, 2010

Book for the newbie parent

I've been reading "Making Sense of Autistic Spectrum Disorders: Create The Brightest Future for Your Child With the Best Treatment Options" by James Coplan, MD.  It's been taking me forever to get through it - partially because I'm finding it somewhat dense reading, and partially because I keep getting distracted by other things (life, you know).  The thing about the book is that I like it, but I'm not sure who the realistic audience is for it.  The target audience is, no doubt, parents of newly diagnosed children.  But it is so intense that I'm not sure that those parents could wade through it; and I'm not sure that the information they'd most want (which is not necessarily the same as what they most need) is at the beginning, where they would want it to be.  


Dr. Coplan gives a backdrop, of sorts, at the beginning.  This makes sense, yet most parents want ANSWERS, up front.  Before they get to the end of the book, where Dr. Coplan is warning them about trendy, possibly dangerous treatments, parents will have already been taken to a TACA meeting or two, caught up in a heart-felt conversation about HBOT treatments, and well into a GF/CF diet trial!  Dr. Coplan considers these things the modern-day equivalent of snake oil sales, and some of them can be dangerous.  He debunks many of the Generation Rescue claims bluntly and with no compassion for those who believe in them - or at least not for their beliefs.  I am not offended by this, but I do think it could turn off some who are confused and inclined to want to investigate "with an open mind."  Dr. Coplan doesn't see any gray area here, and sees any open mind in the area as open to having junk inserted.


He actually is pretty flexible, in the sense that he is open to the use of omega 3's, since he views it as not illogical and not dangerous.  The use, however, of dangerous and potentially lethal "treatments," like chelation, is something he has no patience for.  He doesn't, however, simply dismiss it - he explains, quite clearly, the dangers of the treatments - chelation can cause brain damage or death; HBOT can also damage brain cells, and the (questionable) benefits that have been observed can be obtained in less expensive and less dangerous ways.  


The part of the book I found most useful was his review of various methods of intervention - from ABA to Floortime, to RDI; various classroom approaches; explanations of the uses of OT, PT speech and language.  His review of the use of medication was also quite useful.


Another issue I thought was very important was that Dr. Coplan discussed the fact that ASD has what he calls a "natural history."  That is, whether or not a child receives a particular kind of therapy, or any therapy at all, there will be changes in the way the child behaves, interacts with the world, and matures.  Simply because a child progresses, one cannot ascribe all the progress to whatever intervention a child is receiving.  Progress will occur regardless, simply because a child is maturing, getting older.  Depending on issues, such as the child's cognitive level and degree of atypicality, the child's progress will be greater or lesser, but there will be progress, there will be changes.  The changes will not be even - there will be spurts, and there will, just as with typical children, sometimes be a two-steps-forward-one-step-backwards type of thing.  We can't view everything as being because of a particular intervention!


I wish this book had been out eight years ago, when my son was first diagnosed ... of course, much of what he says was not yet discovered then!