Autism spectrum disorders are affecting more people than ever before
M&L Special Needs Planning, LLC is Proud to Present Their Discussion of the DSM-5’s New Definition of Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD
Company devotes weekly blog to the topic as a part of their ASD awareness campaign, and explains how the changes to the definition may affect individuals with ASD and their families. M&L Special Needs As M&L writes, if your child has been diagnosed…
Autism Awareness Video May 2014
April is Autism Awareness month. A local organization has a facility to both diagnose and treat those with autism.
Autism risk is half genetic, half environmental according to a Swedish Study
A large study in Sweden has shown that genes are just as important as environmental factors in assessing the causes of autism. Researchers were surprised to discover that the inheritability of the neurodevelopmental disorder was about 50 percent –…
The Most Beautiful Way To Stop A Bully I’ve Ever Seen by TDA Group on Youtube!
This is a great video on being different too, being bullied, and the struggles involved:
STRAIN (Anti-bullying Silent Short Film)
Here is fine silent movie, being an old sould gotta love silent movies, about bullying.
It is one of the better ones–>
Anti-Bullying Elementary School Video (Dunsford)
Another fine video against bullying.
I was treated differently all through school, can totally relate.
Even now as an aspie dad with 3 autistic kids, I get it.
I have had only 1 real friend in 45 years besides my wife.
See–>
Disabled children & young people produced song 4 disability rights awareness.
Here is a video that was sent to me on twitter.
It promotes friendship, inclusion, disability rights, anti-bullying!!
An Autism Education Article–>The Power of Persistence By Carol Olechowski

In 2004, Garrett Butch and his wife, Christy, were concerned when their first child, Collin, then 15 months old, “was not progressing as his peers were.” Despite a pediatrician’s reassurances, the couple took him for testing, and, “after five months, we got the diagnosis we feared: autism,” Garrett recalled.
The diagnosis precipitated a struggle “to find the best way to work with Collin and ensure that he had a bright future. [But] the first month of treatment alone cost $4,000, and insurance covered $0.” The nest egg the couple had put away was soon gone.
Adding to their distress was the realization that “many more families could not afford therapy and were getting no help for their children,” said Garrett. Simultaneously, “Collin was beginning school, and many of his teachers lacked the training to work with him properly.”
The Butches “had learned Applied Behavior Analysis (ABA) – a science of human behavior using empirically validated principles to change socially significant behaviors – and were spending countless hours working with Collin. We knew that if we could make it work, then we needed to find a way to help others.”
That way was Maximum Potential Kids. In 2007, the Butches “teamed up with a number of Ph.D.-BCBAs (Board-Certified Behavior Analysts) to create a platform that parents, professionals and schools could use to learn best practices in ABA,” Garrett explained.
Maximum Potential’s video-based format offers “valuable information, as well as samples to reinforce the training. Skills are broken down into a series of manageable, easy-to-learn steps. Students are provided multiple opportunities to practice and perfect each step.” Positive reinforcement, goals targeted to the individual learner’s needs, and progress tracking are also key to the program’s success.

Using ABA, “we have helped Collin reduce some behaviors, begin talking, work on basic skills, and verbalize wants and needs,” noted Garrett, a former history teacher. “We progressed into a curriculum that included taking what he learned in the classroom to the outside world and teaching him social skills. Collin is still autistic, but I believe that without ABA and our talented team of therapists, he would not have the life he has.”
Now 11, Collin “loves music and spelling. He dreams of being in the National Spelling Bee and wants to compete on ‘So You Think You Can Dance.’” He enjoys spending time with his parents and brother Ryan, 8, an athlete and “huge Yankees and Giants fan.”
Maximum Potential has helped others, too. The Alpharetta, Ga.-based program is used by more than 250 U.S. school districts, including the Los Angeles Unified, “the largest in the nation, with more than 9,000 students with autism”; Dallas; Little Rock, Ark.; Brevard County, Fla.; Norman, Okla.; and Stillwater, N.Y. “We also have clients in England, China, France, Russia, Australia, South Africa and Peru,” Garrett added.

The education courses Garrett took at UAlbany “really helped when Christy and I were creating Maximum Potential. Without the knowledge of how a classroom operates, or of the goals and needs of a school, I would have struggled to develop a program schools would use.” Garrett, a history major who played Great Danes football until an injury ended his career, also thanked “those who shaped me at the University” for instilling in him the persistence “to get through tough times by seeing long-term possibilities.”
Learn more about Maximum Potential at www.maximumpotentialkids.com.
How to train your dragon 2, a movie my kids want to see, me too!
I really liked the How to train your dragon, and am looking forward to the second movie, as are my 3 autistic kids.