Autism Awareness, Acceptance, or Something More?
I’ve always wondered about the term “Autism Awareness.” To me, it’s about more than understanding autism. Instead, we should share awareness that autistic individuals are people, just like anyone else. They are unique in their brain processes, but they deserve the same rights, treatment, and quality of life as others. Although schools promote “best practices” and quality education, are they really addressing the needs of the individual?
Are we really seeing EVERY autistic individual not only as deserving of a rich and full life, but also capable of having one?
What are the things that make our life not just livable, but satisfying?
Schools mainly teach children academics, and in the case of children with autism, it can be less than that. Unlike most traditional classes for students without IEPs, special ed classes often use curricula or materials that rely on repetition. Topics such as science, history, and geography are often given short shrift. Art is usually a set of daily craft projects. Music is a basket of instruments in the closet. PE is often just extra time spent on the playground. Don’t get me wrong: Special ed teachers work hard, and are burdened with excessive amounts of regulations and paperwork that leave little time or energy for creating and adapting additional units of study.
But beyond the oppressive weight of regulations, time limitations, paperwork, and burn-out, there is a deeper, more pressing issue. It is often assumed that individuals who are severely impacted by autism, many of whom are diagnosed (whether rightly or erroneously) as intellectually challenged, cannot benefit from a richer, more complex curriculum. Too often, people equate lack of communication with lack of interest, extreme behaviors with extreme disengagement.
People notice the lack of eye contact and assume that individuals aren’t interested in the people and things around them. This couldn’t be more wrong.
There is no reason that children and teenagers with severe autism and other disabilities shouldn’t be exposed to art, world geography, ecosystems and habitats, geology, music. I have seen classes that studied famous artists and their works; that listened to music of all genres and from different countries; that learned about the Arctic Circle and the creatures that live there. Each unit can be adapted to fit the needs of different learning styles and levels, so that all students may access the material.
And in every single case, no matter the age or severity of disability, students responded.
Being constantly exposed to new things leads to increased interest in the world and all the amazing things within it.
This is how we can support students in developing interests, and in building satisfying lives as adults. We can expose them to new things, over and over and over again. If a person has never been exposed to Cajun music, how will they know if they like it? If a child has never watched the Olympics, how will they know they enjoy watching ice skating? This logic can be applied to all interests and hobbies. Many individuals have limited vocabulary or use communication devices, which primarily contain lists of foods or toys. There is no icon for watching slapstick comedies. There is no option to state that they want to learn photography. They may not have the words to say that rugby looks like fun. They have never realized that stamps are all different, so how can they express that they want to start collecting them? They have never been shown pictures of trams in snowy Switzerland, so how will they understand that they want to travel there?
We must expose them to new things, over and over and over again.
Some ideas:
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Introduce different types of music during other activities—classical, instrumental, jazz, rock, Celtic, Cajun, reggae, rap—you can show videos, too!
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Post prints of paintings by famous artists and have students paint what they see—Van Gogh, Mondrian, Kandinsky all are colorful and interesting. They can talk about the paintings, using sentences, one word labels, or by pointing to objects they notice. Have art books in the classroom in addition to children’s books.
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Study a country each month. Prepare the food, hang the flag of the country (available cheap online!), study the animals and plants of the country. Learn how to read a map. Do math problems using items from the country. Have travel books in the book center.
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Give students access to tablets or smartphones and let them take pictures of whatever they want. Teach them how to use the different filters.
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Help them start a collection—of rocks, stamps, miniature cars, or anything that they like. They can write the descriptions, design the display, etc.
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Watch videos of different and unusual sports, then try them out.
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Bring in an old piece of furniture and allow students to paint or refinish it.
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Take a road trip—a short one in your area, a weekend one in your state, or a cross-country trip. Allowing your child to be part of the planning and being prepared for special food requirements can avoid issues.
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Try a variety of outdoor activities—canoeing, surfing, biking, hiking, parasailing, geocaching, dirt biking. Join organizations for families that enjoy these things.
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Listen to different kinds of music at home so that the whole family can experience something new. Have regular dance parties.
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Watch sports together on TV, but go all out! Get team jerseys, cook special food, learn the rules.
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Start a pollinator garden and have the whole family participate in the care. Grow plants that attract butterflies.
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Create scrapbooks together of photos, mementos, or items from trips and special activities.
And then there is the concept of giving. “Making the world a better place” is a common answer to the question of what makes our existence more meaningful. We volunteer, we donate, we practice kindnesses day-to-day. We typically find the causes that mean something special to us, whether it is mentoring children, visiting with the elderly, planting gardens or trees, donating to political causes. These things cause us to evaluate what exactly we would like to change in the world. They align with our values and give us a sense of satisfaction in belonging to something bigger than ourselves. We do these things not because we must, but because it feels good. It feels satisfying to give, doesn’t it?
Yet we deny these opportunities to children with autism, simply because we assume they aren’t interested or won’t understand. This couldn’t be more wrong.
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Save foil or cans and take to a recycling center.
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Write cards to children in hospitals or to members of the military.
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Take flowers to a neighbor.
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Take out an elderly person’s trash.
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Make a picture for a family member.
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Plant trees with local environmental groups or participate in beach and park cleanups.
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Visit a nursing home.
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Wave to the mail carrier.
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Give a snack to the delivery person or trash collector.

community.
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