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Autism: Respecting Difference: An inside view of autism for carers, professionals and families

$27.26  Paperback
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Phoebe Cladwell, Jodie Zutt Australian author

  • Autism: Respecting Difference
  • Autism: Respecting Difference
    Simple & concise introduction to how the world is experienced differently by autistic people and how to respond suitably and sensitively to individuals.

82 pages
2022
ISBN: 9781803881577

Autism: Respecting Difference is a concise, straightforward introduction to the sensory and emotional experiences of autism, designed to help support staff, professionals, and families better understand and engage with autistic people in order to offer meaningful and effective support.

It is difficult to know how other people feel, since we all assume we see, hear, and generally experience the world in the same way. For autistic people, the world they experience can be very different to ours. Autism: Respecting Difference is designed to help people who are new to autism understand how it might feel to be autistic, and how over- and under-sensitivities to incoming signals can overload the autistic brain, triggering anxiety and pain.

Illustrated by artist Jodie Zutt, the book takes readers on a journey into the brainworld of autism in order to better understand and support those who live each day with the challenges of this condition. Adopting a Responsive Communication approach, it explores how to reduce sensory overload while simultaneously establishing emotional engagement and interaction via use of an individuals body language and themes that have particular meaning for them.

Table of Contents

Part One: The Brainworld of Autism

  • Which of us is autistic?
  • Welcome to the brainworld of autism
  • Problems with connections
  • Connectivity problems and consequent distress behaviours are not character deficits
  • Synaesthesia
  • Sight
  • Sound
  • Taste and smell
  • Touch
  • Pressure
  • Hugs
  • Emotional overload
  • Speech
  • Bad words and bad feelings
  • Trauma
  • Physical feeling of self
  • Warning: Psychiatric (mis)diagnosis

Part Two: Responsive Communication

  • A bit of history
  • Using body language to communicate
  • Anticipation
  • Getting to know you
  • Case studies: April, Josh, Gabriel, Pranve
  • Respecting difference