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Autism-Are The Schools Prepared For The Autism Epidemic

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By donnaleemason

Entering School in The Fall


 

The number of Autistic children are growing.

Currently there is 1 in 150 children this year who will be diagnosed on the Autism Spectrum.

What is being done to prepare for this onslaught of Autistic children who will be entering the school system?

The Austism Spectrum encompasses a large scale. There are literally thousands of Autistic children with varying degrees of Autism joining the school system yearly. Some of the schools would never have seen a child with Autism and are ill prepared to deal with it.

Each Autistic child is an individual and the Individualized Education Plan cannot be mass produced and needs to be geared solely towards the needs of that child.

No two Autistic children are the same so you can't have a one size fits all IEP.

In the new age no child left behind school regime, what is being done to prepare the teachers for the new evolution of students that they are going to be teaching?

Children with Autism come with multiple challenges that the teachers are going to have to face, one of the main ones being communication. Approximately 50% of Autistic children never speak. Effective methods of communication between the teachers and the Autistic student will need to be developed. Some include picture boards, where the student can pick the item that he wants, the pecs system, which basically works the same with an expansion of objects and sometimes just gesturing.

Some unfortunately display their Autistic symptoms more than others. The stimming, usually displayed as flapping and the child with Autism's sometimes inappropriate obsessive fixation on certain objects may be misunderstood by teachers and other students who may never have seen this before.

Some of these Autistic signs and symptoms are used by the child with Autism to regulate themselves and a place may need to be provided where the child can do this in order to cope with the overwhelming changes being in a different environment with a larger number of strangers will bring.

Also another factor which will need to be addressed is the privacy of the Autistic child. Obviously sometimes, these children behave in manners that a regular child does not and a stricter policy for privacy should be maintained to stop teachers and staff discussing this outside of school. The Autistic child is not always in control of their mannerisms or behaviours and they deserve the same dignity that a regular student has.

Are our Autististic children going to be lost in the shuffle?

Doomed to spend their days in a classroom where they are being babysat at best by teachers who quite frankly have no idea how to help them?

More emphasis needs to be placed now on recruiting and training Special Education teachers who want to make a change in the Autistic child's life.

Those that have been doing Special Ed for a long time need classes updating their skills and introducing them to the challenges they are going to face with the children with Autism. A lot has changed since the first days when Autism was first diagnosed and treated with electric shock therapy.

There are many documented cases now where children who have received effective early intervention lose some of their Autistic signs and symptoms and go on to live productive lives e.g. Temple Grandin.

Children with Autism flourish with one on one instruction.

Schools need to be aware that they may need to hire more auxilliary staff to help with the Autistic children.

They also need to be aware that burn out is a high risk for teachers with children with Autism and time needs to be allowed during the day when they can switch out with another teacher thereby refreshing themselves.

Regular class teachers need to be educated as the higher functioning Autistic children will be in their classes. The teaching format can and should be adjusted to assist the child with Autism in their learning process. This is not to say that time for the other students should be taken away, merely that this is where other staff can be incorporated to assist the Autistic student.

Regular communication between the families and the educational staff should be scheduled. Parents should be encouraged with their input as to the Autistic child's education. Quite a number of parents of Autistic children are relentless in their endeavours to improve the prognosis of their child with Autism, extra activities, exercises and the use of treatments to name but a few.

By working together as a team, they can all help the child with Autism grow more productively.

Headmasters need to be educated regarding Autism and the implications that it will have on their school in regards to extra staffing and the way the Special Ed department works, as officially as it is in their school, they are meant to be supervising it.

Ignorance is not an excuse and it will not be accepted by the parents of the Autistic children who want a decent education for their affected child.

If the no child left behind policy is going to be wholly effective for Autistic children as well as the average school child, then changes need to be made now.

The numbers of children with Autism are increasing annually.

If the schools wait to make changes, then the child with Autism will be left behind



Update

 Curently the number of children with Autism is 1 in 100.

The numbers grow higher daily.

Yet still not much is being done to find out why our children are becoming Autistic.

Where is the money for research into Autism going?

I have 3 children in the school system. Daily I hear of Autistic children being abused in the school system. Not being able to develop to their full potential. Parents being harassed as they try to fight for the rights of their disabled child. Schools not providing a safe environment or providing these children an opportunity to learn.

They need to wake up. The numbers are growing larger. 10 yrs from now, will every new child born be Autistic. It is a scary thought.

Comments

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Georgiakevin profile image

Georgiakevin  says:
2 years ago

As a teacher of students who are moderately to profoundly disabled, I currently have 2 students who are autistic. It was reassuring to know that I practice what DonnaLee suggests teachers do. One thing I would add however. Students who are moderately to profoundly disabled should be on a life skill vocational skill education track.

donnaleemason profile image

donnaleemason  says:
2 years ago

Good suggestion Kevin. I would like to think that some parents have already started doing this at home but it would be great to see follow through in the classroom.

Donna

Chef Jeff profile image

Chef Jeff  says:
2 years ago

The hardest battle I have (or better, had) was in getting help for autistic and disabled children from amongst my ELL (English Language Learners) students. Since there is an acute shortage of professionals capable of testing ELL children with LD's (Learning Disabilities) many of these children may go undetected. the few people who could do the testing are extremely expensive.

Also, there are family issues in that many parents do not want their children (a) singled out and (b) called disabled.

I say I had this battle because I am being let go as a teacher, not doubt in part due to my insistance that several of students be screened and/or tested for various learning disabilities. Currently the only ELL student in our entire district who has a IEP (Individual Learning Plan) is one who was diagnosed in another district. He came here with the plan, and we are obliged to uphold it.

donnaleemason profile image

donnaleemason  says:
2 years ago

Where are you from Jeff?

This is appalling. I am sorry that they are letting you go, disabled people need more advocates like you.

Donna

Chef Jeff profile image

Chef Jeff  says:
2 years ago

I'm in Illinois, but the problem extends to other states.  Mostly it has to do with falling income for schools.  Foreclosures take away from the tax base, upon which schools are dependent.  Until we find a better way to fund our public schools, I am afraid that many necessary programs for our disabled students will go by the wayside.

I have discovered that passionate advocates get fired.  That is the world we live in today, just like when whistle blowers get fired.

Shelly McRae profile image

Shelly McRae  says:
2 years ago

As members of the medical community aquire more diagnostic skills, and the number of children with learning disabilities and autism enter the school system, existing programs become outmoded and overburdened. Your article emphasises the consequences of this ongoing scenario.

donnaleemason profile image

donnaleemason  says:
2 years ago

I am sorry to hear that Jeff.

I know Shelly, it is looking more and more like a horror movie every day.

Dr Jones profile image

Dr Jones  says:
2 years ago

This is not a sales pitch

i developed a system to help children with medical issues

see my page for more info

I have been contacted by parents who think what i have developed could help autism.

What do you think? Please contact me

The project is called animal agentz (kids like them, they play with them) and it is web based.

It will not be ready until next week. No has funded the project. It has won awards.

Each Animal Agent teaches different stress-management and coping skills.

The Animal Agentz behaviours are as follows:Breathing skills; taught by a fishStretching skills; taught by a dogDistraction skills; taught by a catGuided imagery skills; taught by a monkeyPositive self statements; taught by a lion

Thank you

(link AnimalAgentz.com)

Julie A. Johnson profile image

Julie A. Johnson  says:
2 years ago

I have a child with asperger's syndrome (a form of autism), and I am also a teacher. I am amazed that many teachers have so little knowledge about this disorder, and it saddens me they lack the skills to deal with the issues the child with autism brings to the classroom. Parents really have to be the child's advocate because many professionals just don't know how to handle situations; they have not been educated about what to do and how to do it when it comes to issues involving children with autism.

donnaleemason profile image

donnaleemason  says:
2 years ago

It is good that you are a teacher in addition to having a child on the spectrum.

Personally I have found that being the children's advocate is a full time job and I have come across a number of teachers who discard what I say simply because I am "Just a parent".

How are you doing with your child Julie?

Julie A. Johnson profile image

Julie A. Johnson  says:
2 years ago

Hanging in there! Good days, bad days, glad the school year is almost over. It's hard having him home all day, but sometimes having him at home is easier than worrying about having to deal with school issues. Thanks, for asking.

donnaleemason profile image

donnaleemason  says:
2 years ago

Can't say I am looking too much forward to the summer break either, if you ever want to talk, feel free to contact me.

Donna

Chef Jeff profile image

Chef Jeff  says:
2 years ago

Teachers are like most people - we do not have any special gene that allows us to undertand any better than other people what it is like to have any form of disability.  I am mildly Dyslexic, which means that when I went to school, I was just "dumb."  I overcame my LD through sheer determination, and a lot of see-through color plastic sheets.

The computer has aided me greatly as I get older because I can copy & paste text, change background colors & text colors so that I might more easily read complex writings.

Failing that, I still often use red or yellow plastic over the pages I read.  Normally, I don't like to do this in public, but if I need to, then I do it anyway.  Sometimes I even read the pages "upside down", which I find easier in stressful situations.

Having had the privilege of having autistic children inmy classroom, I can tell you they have taught me a lot!  One was an avid & very creative artist, another built models of ships & trains that would make an architect jealous in details.

Others showed remarkable skills in areas I could only hope to emulate.

Unfortunately, these skills were not in "curriculum" areas, and in math and science and social studies, these children did not fare so well.  I advocated for and failed to sway popular opinion into a curriculum that met the needs of the children who have LDs of any kind.

I am, however, greatly joyful to see that parents & some educators are advocating loudly and strongly for children to be taught things THEY will need to succeed in life.  My young student friend where I used to live has learned many important life-lessons and now lives on his own, works at a job and is as successful as any other student from his graduating class. 

He has also taught himself, throuigh listening, some reading, but also by becoming interested in the History Channel, about things he was allowed to fail at in K-12.

The remarkable thing is that when I met him in 8th grade he did not speak English and could barely speak Spanish, and could not read or write in either language.  Yes, I helped him, but no, I didn't teach him - he did that himself, because he wanted to.  I would not let "the system" hold him back, and he learned!

There is no "one size fits all" when it comes to education, and many teachers are learning this and apply it.  Others are overwhelmed by the enormity of it all and give up, leave teaching, and fail to make an impact.

The bottom line is that children with LDs are not "dumb" or incapable of learning.  It is that the system needs to and MUST change to recognize that children learn in different ways.  WE must adapt to the children, not the other way around.

To those fellow teachers who have put this into practice, thank God you are there!

donnaleemason profile image

donnaleemason  says:
2 years ago

You are a remarkable man Chef Jeff and he sounds like a remarkable student.

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