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- Essay Name : 619.txt
- Uploader : Steven Hajducko
- Email Address :
- Language : English
- Subject : Biology
- Title : False Words and False Hopes
- Grade : 89%
- School System : Junior College
- Country : USA
- Author Comments : Good report for Autism.
- Teacher Comments : "Informative, good organization"
- Date : 11/29/95
- Site found at : Through "Report/Essay Database", shell.idt.net
- --------------------------------------------------------------
- Hajducko 1
-
- Steven Hajducko
-
- Prof. Sims
-
- MWF 10:00-11:00
-
- 29 November 1995
-
- False Words and False Hope
-
- Autism is a childhood disease where the child is in a private world of their
- own. A description of an autistic child by her mother is:
- We start with an image---a tiny, golden child on hands and knees,
- circling round and round a spot on the floor in mysterious self-
- absorbed delight. She does not look up, though she is smiling
- and laughing; she does not call our attention to the mysterious
- object of her pleasure. She does not see us at all. She and the
- spot are all there is, and though she is eighteen months old, an
- age for touching, tasting, pointing, pushing, exploring, she is doing
- none of these. (Groden 2)
- This is the most important trait in an autistic child: They don't interact or
- socialize with other people. Other characteristics in autistic children are
- language retardation and ritualistic or compulsive behaviors. It used to be
- thought that children became autistic because of "poor parenting" and that the
- only solution was that the parents should be removed from the child (Baron-
- Cohen 26). Now it is known that autism is caused by biological factors due to:
- neurological symptoms, mental handicap, genetic causes, infections, and even
- difficulties in pregnancy.
- Even though autism is thought of as a disease or disorder, autistic
- Hajducko 2
- children can demonstrate special skills. These skills are referred to as "isolated
- islets of intelligence" (Baron-Cohen 53). Some examples of these are found in
- an autistic child's ability to draw, play music, or recall a certain date. Nadia, an
- autistic child, has the ability to draw in an "almost photographic way" (Baron-
- Cohen 54). Autistic children can also play instruments, accurately sing songs,
- recognize structures of music, etc. A problem that arises when autistic children
- are going through therapy is that they start to lose their remarkable skills.
- For parents to find out that their child is autistic can be very
- shocking. They go from having a bouncy, livey baby to a having a total stranger
- as their child. Many therapies have been devised to help autistic children.
- Some of these therapies are: behavior therapy, speech and language therapy,
- holding therapy, music therapy, and the newest one, facilitation therapy.
- Since most autistic children are different and their behaviors are different, one
- therapy may be more effective than another one. Facilitation therapy is catching
- on, but is already becoming a controversy. Although facilitation therapy is one
- of the most popular used methods in communicating with autistic children, it is
- being downgraded because of the controversies where the children are being
- manipulated by the facilitators.
- A child with autism can be detected by the age of three. "If treament is
- started right away, the child may gain their normal functioning. This is a critical
- factor in reversing the disorder" (McEachin 105). Other elements in autistic
- therapy that are important factors in helping with the child are "observations,
- establishing relationships, and changing behaviors" (Simons 27). Once autistic
- children have made a relationship, they are brought closer to the outside world.
- That is why facilitation therapy is so popular. This kind of therapy helps the
-
- Hajducko 3
- outside world to communicate with the lost child. The autistic child is supported
- by a facilitator who holds the arm, the wrist, or the hand. This support helps the
- child to control his/her movements in order for the child to point to words,
- pictures, etc. In this way autistic children can express feelings or thoughts that
- no one thought they had.
- So why is there controversy over facilitation therapy ? The autistic child
- is being observed, a relationship is formed between the child and the facilitator,
- and the gap is being closed. The problem with facilitation therapy is expressed
- by Dr. Green from the New York Times, "Facilitated communication seems
- tantamount to a miracle, but it's more like a self-fulfulling prophecy - you see
- what you want to see" (C11). There is always the chance that the child is not the
- one expressing the thoughts. Scientists in the New York Times "are likening it
- to a Ouija board" (C1), because as people subconsciously move the message
- indicator to get an answer to their question, facilitators can move the autistic
- child's hand to what they want. Another argument against facilitation therapy
- was in an article, the "Harvard Educational Review," where three concerns were
- mentioned: 1) facilitated communication manipulated the handicapped, 2)
- facilitation has never been proven valid, and 3) facilitation contradicts "50 years
- of research in autism and developmental disabilities" (Biklen 110). It seems
- impossible that an autistic child who can not speak can suddenly communicate
- with words. The autistic child can answer questions when asked by a facilitator,
- but normally would just ignore a person that asked a question. Even though
- facilitation therapy is a gateway into the autistic child's mind, it causes much
- skepticism.
-
- Hajducko 4
- "One of the greatest barriers to success with facilitation is the tendency to
- underestimate people's abilities based on prevailing paradigms or definitions of
- disability" (Biklen 193). When assumptions are made about people with a
- handicap, others don't put too much faith in their ability to spell, write, or
- communicate. People that are retarded are assumed that they have no
- intelligence, so others do everything for them. Another example is that people
- talk loud around the elderly because they are assumed to have lost their
- hearing. Many assumptions related to autism are: "receptive problems,
- processing problems, global cognitive failure, specific cognitive failure, levels of
- deficit, and the inability to use pronouns, verb tenses, and other forms of
- language" (Biklen 193). These assumptions would lead a facilitator to think that
- an autistic child, who has always had to depend on others, would have no skill of
- their own. Biklen suggests instead of facilitators making wrong assumptions
- about the child's ability, that they should encourage the child in a "natural
- manner," and "treat the person being facilitated as competent" (193). This would
- be hard to do knowing the limitations of the person. It is also hard to think of
- someone as being competent when that person starts to scream or starts hitting
- themselves.
- Many parents doubt the effectiveness of facilitation therapy with their
- child. How can their brain damaged child know anything? Dr. Schneiderman, a
- pediatrician at the State University of New York Health Sciences Center in
- Syracuse, uses facilitation therapy with his autistic son, David. In a New York
- Times article he exclaims his concern over whether or not he is the one cuing
- the responses, "I worry a lot about whether what I'm doing is real when I
- facilitate. If I'm doing this unconsciously, I'm unconsciously producing an autistic
-
- Hajducko 5
- personality" (C11). Another father expressed his doubts about facilitation
- therapy over his daughter:
- My child is severly handicapped. This breaks my heart; but I have
- learned to live with that and make it part of my joy. I cannot in
- good conscience allow that to be erased by the denial of other;
- that [she] . . . is reading and comprehending . . . is incredibly
- ludicrous, not to mention serious fabrication . . . . The onus of
- responsibility to prove whether or not this so-called method is
- effective should rest on the practitioner. (Biklen 119)
- The father had also done facilitated communication with his daughter and
- nothing happened. If encouragement, love, and support is given by the
- facilitator to the autistic child, and these elements are supposed to help the child
- communicate, then a parent should be able to get a response from their child.
- Facilitation therapy is controversial in that manipulation is thought to be
- involved. Biklen uses an argument by Cummins and Priors:
- The success of assisted communications has very little to do with
- emotional support, . . . and very much to do with physical control
- by the assistant; either in the form of overt control of the client's
- movement's or by supplying covert cues which are used by the
- client to control his or her movements. (112).
- Biklen noticed in his first studies of facilitation, an autistic child would only
- communicate with one facilitator, and could not independently communicate
- even though he wrote, "Let me show them what I can really do" (112). Physical
- manipulation is also evident if the child being facilitated is not old enough to
- spell, but is communicating on the keyboard. Other signs of physical
- manipulation are: if the child types without any problems of pronoun reversals,
- Hajducko 6
- incorrect verb tenses, not normal "autistic" language, and if the child says things
- that others would not want to know or that aren't true about family and friends
- (Biklen 128).
- The most recent controversial subject with facilitation therapy is the
- reports of sexual abuse to the autistic child. Dr. Bernard Rimland, director of the
- Autism Research Institute in San Diego, states, "I know of about 25 cases
- through facilitated communication of sexually abusing their kids" (Goleman C11).
- The result of the cases is that the facilitator was sexually abused and expresses
- the event through the autistic child. When these cases go through the court it is
- up to the judge to determine the reliability of the facilitator (Lambert B10). It's
- sad to think that facilitators would use the autistic child in revealing their sexual
- abuse.
- Facilitation is not the only answer in helping with autism. Behavior
- therapy is making progress with its effects in treating autism. In the New York
- Times, it explains how a team of psychologists have reported that the progress
- of "19 children with autism who at age 2 or 3 had recieved 40 hours a week of
- behavioral treatment . . . By age 11 . . . nine of those autistic children were going
- to regular schools" (C10) This kind of therapy is used to award good behavior
- and discourage bad behavior. It is less controversial and seems to working
- more than facilitated communication. Also with behavioral therapy, it not only
- communicates with the child, but obviously can bring some children back into the
- real world. Facilitation therapy only helps the child to "talk," if it is even the child
- speaking.
- Another treatment for autism is an effective medication called
- clomipramine. It was reported in the Archives of General Psychiatry that it
-
- Hajducko 7
- "reduced a range of symptoms in three-quarters of autistic children tested"
- (Goleman C11). The improvements in the children were that they were able to
- make eye contact and begin interactions. Also compulsive behaviors were
- reduced. In facilitation therapy many of the compulsive behaviors are still
- observed, plus when the child is given medication there is no doubt that it is the
- autistic child doing the communicating.
- For some autistic children facilitation therapy may be the key to reaching
- out. For the majority of autistic people, to close the gap between the real world
- and the world they live in, takes intensive therapy. It takes more then a hand
- supporting a wrist or an arm to communicate. Facilitation therapy is proving to be
- too controversial to really know if it's the autistic person's own thoughts. Yes,
- there is a hidden person inside that mute creature. Hopefully with love and
- support from family and other outside contacts, that unique individual will
- emerge.
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-