Month of February , 2008

"Day After Day" The first ever musical about autism- opens this week in New Jersey.

Onegary's picture

Day After Day is a musical production about autism. Please make plans to join us for a limited run of this hugely popular play which follows the lives of three separate families and their daily struggle raising and communicating with their autistic children.  This will run all over New Jersey starting this Friday.  This musical first came out just over four years agao and famlies have begged us to bring it back.  If you did not have a chance to see it the first time-  please try to come out now.  go to www.poac.net for details.

Thanks,

Gary Weitzen

President POAC- Parents Of Autistic Children

No Cost Autism Center Opening in Southern California

mmollway's picture

New Vision Children's Services, a non-profit organization in Southern California is embarking on opening an autism center that would provide services to children with autism or a related disorder and their families free of charge.  Services they seek to offer are biomedical intervention, nutrition, neurological retraining, OT, speech, audiology, and behavioral interventions. For more info. go to www.nvlearning.com

For an enlightening and entertaining ride, visit us here:

Spectrumspectacle's picture

Spectrumspectacle.blogspot.com

LACK OF DIVERSITY AT AUTISM SOCIETY'S CONFERENCE

Leyland's picture

Dear Readers:

I am deeply concerned and dismayed about the prevailing "white" image of autism portrayed by the Autism Society (AS), especially in the staging of their Annual Conferences.  

The upcoming Orlando Conference, like others before it, has workshops whose content lacks any reference to issues of race,ethnicity and culture. Also, the conference presenters (speakers) are persons, "experts" who  largely are representative of the "white" race. (See the pixs on the AS Orlando Conference web-site)

The Orlando Conference workshops are void of content that reflects and/or directly addresses the cultural and or cross-cultural dynamics that impact autism in such areas as medical diagnoses, the values, beliefs and mores related to issues of treatment and threapeutic interventions, culturally-sensitive/culturally-appropriate testing/evaluative and research methodologies, tools, community education, and I could go on and on.

Likewise, each year the conference presenters/speakers continue to reflecta very visible lack of racial minority representation. Am I to believe that the Autism Society is incapable of locating and recruiting such "experts," or that there are no such "experts" from racial minority backgrounds with professional qualifications, work experiences, or even with  lived experiences among the growing numbers of non-white persons with autism, or non-white parents of a child or children with autism? 

Maybe , the Autism Society just continues to perceive racial minority people as mere atendees at such conferences. Yet, as some of my collegues have pointed out, one has to look very hard to find the visible reflection of attendees from non-white and/or diverse race and cultural backgrounds at such conferences.  read more »