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The University of North Carolina TEACCH Autism Program creates and disseminates community-based services, training programs, and research for individuals of all ages and skill levels with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), to enhance the quality of life for them and their families across the lifespan. [1]
This page is a noticeboard for matters particularly relevant to articles related to autism and autistic spectrum disorders. Please refer to the talk pages of these articles for related discussions. Please refer to the talk pages of these articles for related discussions.
ASAN's early work mostly focused on fighting the use of aversives, restraint, and seclusion in special education; [10] [11] [12] in December 2007, they spoke out publicly against Autism Speaks, [13] and against the NYU Child Study Center's Ransom Notes ad campaign, which compared autism, ADHD, OCD, and eating disorders to kidnappers holding ...
Center for Autism and Related Disorders – service provider. Generation Rescue – a nonprofit organization that advocates the view that autism and related disorders are primarily caused by environmental factors, particularly vaccines. M.I.N.D. Institute – research and treatment center.
The library offers several events this week, ranging from a Mini Job Fair to a discussion on the book 'Thinking in Pictures: My Life with Autism.'
The neurodiversity paradigm is a view of autism as a different way of being rather than as a disease or disorder that must be cured. [ 40 ] [ 42 ] Autistic people are considered to have neurocognitive differences [ 34 ] which give them distinct strengths and weaknesses, and are capable of succeeding when appropriately accommodated and supported.
The Three Meadows Farm program is open to individuals with autism from other autism service providers as well, Brothers said. Brothers said he is biased about Paradise Salad. "It is really ...
The Autism Society of America (ASA) was founded in 1965 [5] by Bernard Rimland [1] together with Ruth C. Sullivan and a small group of other parents of children with autism.Its original name was the National Society for Autistic Children; [4] the name was changed to emphasize that autistic children grow up.