Temple Grandin, Ph.D.
Assistant Professor
Colorado State University
Fort Collins, CO 80523, USA
(Revised: December 2002)
Good teachers helped me to achieve success. I was able to overcome autism
because I had good teachers. At age 2 1/2 I was placed in a structured nursery
school with experienced teachers. From an early age I was taught to have good
manners and to behave at the dinner table. Children with autism need to have a
structured day, and teachers who know how to be firm but gentle.
Between the ages of 2 1/4 and 5 my day was structured, and I was not allowed
to tune out. I had 45 minutes of one-to-one speech therapy five days a week, and
my mother hired a nanny who spent three to four hours a day playing games with
me and my sister. She taught 'turn taking' during play activities. When we made
a snowman, she had me roll the bottom ball; and then my sister had to make the
next part. At mealtimes, every-body ate together; and I was not allowed to do
any "stims." The only time I was allowed to revert back to autistic behavior was
during a one-hour rest period after lunch. The combination of the nursery
school, speech therapy, play activities, and "miss manners" meals added up to 40
hours a week, where my brain was kept connected to the world.
1.) Many people with autism are visual thinkers. I think in pictures. I do
not think in language. All my thoughts are like videotapes running in my
imagination. Pictures are my first language, and words are my second language.
Nouns were the easiest words to learn because I could make a picture in my mind
of the word. To learn words like "up" or "down," the teacher should demonstrate
them to the child. For example, take a toy airplane and say "up" as you make the
airplane takeoff from a desk. Some children will learn better if cards with the
words "up" and "down" are attached to the toy airplane. The "up" card is
attached when the plane takes off. The "down" card is attached when it lands.
2.) Avoid long strings of verbal instructions. People with autism have
problems with remembering the sequence. If the child can read, write the
instructions down on a piece of paper. I am unable to remember sequences. If I
ask for directions at a gas station, I can only remember three steps. Directions
with more than three steps have to be written down. I also have difficulty
remembering phone numbers because I cannot make a picture in my mind.
3.) Many children with autism are good at drawing, art and computer
programming. These talent areas should be encouraged. I think there needs to be
much more emphasis on developing the child's talents. Talents can be turned into
skills that can be used for future employment.
4.) Many autistic children get fixated on one subject such as trains or maps.
The best way to deal with fixations is to use them to motivate school work. If
the child likes trains, then use trains to teach reading and math. Read a book
about a train and do math problems with trains. For example, calculate how long
it takes for a train to go between New York and Washington.
5.) Use concrete visual methods to teach number concepts. My parents gave me
a math toy which helped me to learn numbers. It consisted of a set of blocks
which had a different length and a different color for the numbers one through
ten. With this I learned how to add and subtract. To learn fractions my teacher
had a wooden apple that was cut up into four pieces and a wooden pear that was
cut in half. From this I learned the concept of quarters and halves.
6.) I had the worst handwriting in my class. Many autistic children have
problems with motor control in their hands. Neat handwriting is sometimes very
hard. This can totally frustrate the child. To reduce frustration and help the
child to enjoy writing, let him type on the computer. Typing is often much
easier.
7.) Some autistic children will learn reading more easily with phonics, and
others will learn best by memorizing whole words. I learned with phonics. My
mother taught me the phonics rules and then had me sound out my words. Children
with lots of echolalia will often learn best if flash cards and picture books
are used so that the whole words are associated with pictures. It is important
to have the picture and the printed word on the same side of the card. When
teaching nouns the child must hear you speak the word and view the picture and
printed word simultaneously. An example of teaching a verb would be to hold a
card that says "jump," and you would jump up and down while saying "jump."
8.) When I was a child, loud sounds like the school bell hurt my ears like a
dentist drill hitting a nerve. Children with autism need to be protected from
sounds that hurt their ears. The sounds that will cause the most problems are
school bells, PA systems, buzzers on the score board in the gym, and the sound
of chairs scraping on the floor. In many cases the child will be able to
tolerate the bell or buzzer if it is muffled slightly by stuffing it with
tissues or duct tape. Scraping chairs can be silenced by placing slit tennis
balls on the ends of the legs or installing carpet. A child may fear a certain
room because he is afraid he may be suddenly subjected to squealing microphone
feedback from the PA system. The fear of a dreaded sound can cause bad behavior.
If a child covers his ears, it is an indicator that a certain sound hurts his
ears. Sometimes sound sensitivity to a particular sound, such as the fire alarm,
can be desensitized by recording the sound on a tape recorder. This will allow
the child to initiate the sound and gradually increase its volume. The child
must have control of playback of the sound.
9.) Some autistic people are bothered by visual distractions and fluorescent
lights. They can see the flicker of the 60-cycle electricity. To avoid this
problem, place the child's desk near the window or try to avoid using
fluorescent lights. If the lights cannot be avoided, use the newest bulbs you
can get. New bulbs flicker less. The flickering of fluorescent lights can also
be reduced by putting a lamp with an old-fashioned incandescent light bulb next
to the child's desk.
10.) Some hyperactive autistic children who fidget all the time will often be
calmer if they are given a padded weighted vest to wear. Pressure from the
garment helps to calm the nervous system. I was greatly calmed by pressure. For
best results, the vest should be worn for twenty minutes and then taken off for
a few minutes. This prevents the nervous system from adapting to it.
11.) Some individuals with autism will respond better and have improved eye
contact and speech if the teacher interacts with them while they are swinging on
a swing or rolled up in a mat. Sensory input from swinging or pressure from the
mat sometimes helps to improve speech. Swinging should always be done as a fun
game. It must NEVER be forced.
12.) Some children and adults can sing better than they can speak. They may
respond better if words and sentences are sung to them. Some children with
extreme sound sensitivity will respond better if the teacher talks to them in a
low whisper.
13.) Some nonverbal children and adults cannot process visual and auditory
input at the same time. They are mono-channel. They cannot see and hear at the
same time. They should not be asked to look and listen at the same time. They
should be given either a visual task or an auditory task. Their immature nervous
system is not able to process simultaneous visual and auditory input.
14.) In older nonverbal children and adults touch is often their most
reliable sense. It is often easier for them to feel. Letters can be taught by
letting them feel plastic letters. They can learn their daily schedule by
feeling objects a few minutes before a scheduled activity. For example, fifteen
minutes before lunch give the person a spoon to hold. Let them hold a toy car a
few minutes before going in the car.
15.) Some children and adults with autism will learn more easily if the
computer key-board is placed close to the screen. This enables the individual to
simultaneously see the keyboard and screen. Some individuals have difficulty
remembering if they have to look up after they have hit a key on the keyboard.
16.) Nonverbal children and adults will find it easier to associate words
with pictures if they see the printed word and a picture on a flashcard. Some
individuals do not under-stand line drawings, so it is recommended to work with
real objects and photos first. The picture and the word must be on the same
side of the card.
17.) Some autistic individuals do not know that speech is used for
communication. Language learning can be facilitated if language exercises
promote communication. If the child asks for a cup, then give him a cup. If the
child asks for a plate, when he wants a cup, give him a plate. The individual
needs to learn that when he says words, concrete things happen. It is easier for
an individual with autism to learn that their words are wrong if the incorrect
word resulted in the incorrect object.
18.) Many individuals with autism have difficulty using a computer mouse. Try
a roller ball (or tracking ball) pointing device that has a separate button for
clicking. Autistics with motor control problems in their hands find it very
difficult to hold the mouse still during clicking.
19.) Children who have difficulty understanding speech have a hard time
differentiating between hard consonant sounds such as 'D' in dog and 'L' in log.
My speech teacher helped me to learn to hear these sounds by stretching out and
enunciating hard consonant sounds. Even though the child may have passed a pure
tone hearing test he may still have difficulty hearing hard consonants. Children
who talk in vowel sounds are not hearing consonants.
20.) Several parents have informed me that using the closed captions on the
television helped their child to learn to read. The child was able to read the
captions and match the printed works with spoken speech. Recording a favorite
program with captions on a tape would be helpful because the tape can be played
over and over again and stopped.
21.) Some autistic individuals do not understand that a computer mouse moves
the arrow on the screen. They may learn more easily if a paper arrow that looks
EXACTLY like the arrow on the screen is taped to the mouse.
22.) Children and adults with visual processing problems can see flicker on
TV type computer monitors. They can sometimes see better on laptops and flat
panel displays which have less flicker.
23.) Children and adults who fear escalators often have visual processing
problems. They fear the escalator because they cannot determine when to get on
or off. These individuals may also not be able to tolerate fluorescent lights.
The Irlen colored glasses may be helpful for them.
24.) Individuals with visual processing problems often find it easier to read
if black print is printed on colored paper to reduce contrast. Try light tan,
light blue, gray, or light green paper. Experiment with different colors. Avoid
bright yellow--it may hurt the individual's eyes. Irlen colored glasses may also
make reading easier. (Click here to visit the
Irlen Institute's web site.)
25.) Teaching generalization is often a problem for children with autism. To
teach a child to generalize the principle of not running across the street, it
must be taught in many different locations. If he is taught in only one
location, the child will think that the rule only applies to one specific place.
26.) A common problem is that a child may be able to use the toilet correctly
at home but refuses to use it at school. This may be due to a failure to
recognize the toilet. Hilde de Clereq from Belgium discovered that an autistic
child may use a small non-relevant detail to recognize an object such as a
toilet. It takes detective work to find that detail. In one case a boy would
only use the toilet at home that had a black seat. His parents and teacher were
able to get him to use the toilet at school by covering its white seat with
black tape. The tape was then gradually removed and toilets with white seats
were now recognized as toilets.
27.) Sequencing is very difficult for individuals with severe autism.
Sometimes they do not understand when a task is presented as a series of steps.
An occupational therapist successfully taught a nonverbal autistic child to use
a playground slide by walking his body through climbing the ladder and going
down the slide. It must be taught by touch and motor rather than showing him
visually. Putting on shoes can be taught in a similar manner. The teacher should
put her hands on top of the childs hands and move the childs hands over his
foot so he feels and understands the shape of his foot. The next step is feeling
the inside and the outside of a slip-on shoe. To put the shoe on, the teacher
guides the childs hands to the shoe and, using the hand-over-hand method,
slides the shoe onto the childs foot. This enables the child to feel the entire
task of putting on his shoe.
28.) Fussy eating is a common problem. In some cases the child may be fixated
on a detail that identifies a certain food. Hilde de Clerq found that one child
only ate Chiquita bananas because he fixated on the labels. Other fruit such as
apples and oranges were readily accepted when Chiquita labels were put on them.
Try putting different but similar foods in the cereal box or another package of
a favorite food. Another mother had success by putting a homemade hamburger with
a wheat free bun in a McDonalds package.
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YOUR HEALTH CARE PROVIDER.
"A foolish faith in authority is the worst enemy of truth."
-- Albert Einstein, letter to a friend, 1901
"I know of no safe depository of the ultimate powers of the society but the people themselves, and if we think them not enlightened enough to exercise control with a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by education."
-- Thomas Jefferson, letter to William C. Jarvis, September 28, 1820
"What's the point of vaccination if it doesn't protect you from the unvaccinated?"
-- Sandy Gottstein
"Who gets to decide what the greater good is and how many will be sacrificed to it?"