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October 27, 2009 at 08:14:36
Part Three: Talking with Dr. Temple Grandin, Author of "Animals in Translation"By Joan Brunwasser (about the author) Page 4 of 6 page(s) Do you go and speak at schools at all? I can't
go to everyplace so I mainly speak at autism conferences and lots of teachers
go to those
conferences. A typical autism conference may have 400 people come to it, about
a third of
them will be parents and the rest will be teachers, speech therapists, guidance counselors,
occupational therapists, and other professionals. How long have you been doing the circuit of autism
conferences? I
started some of the early ones back in the mid "80s but I really got on the
circuit when Thinking in Pictures came out
which was in 1995. Do you notice much change in schooling or the way
teachers look at things after coming to these conferences? A lot of
teachers say I've really given them insight. The other thing I talk about a lot
in my talks is
the sensory issues. A lot of kids with autism, dyslexia , ADHD, and other
problems, they
have problems with sensory oversensitivity. Like, loud sounds will hurt their
ears or they may
a real problem with tolerating fluorescent lights. They can see the flicker of fluorescent
lights and that just drives them crazy because it's like being in a discoteque. Problems
with touch sensitivity - like, I can't wear wool against my skin because it's
like sandpaper
ripping my nerves off. Let's take that example. The wool sensitivity. You
can choose to wear non-wool items. But what does a person do who finds himself in an environment with fluorescent lighting? That's a
real problem. I'd say when it comes to environmental problems that's big number one. One
of the things that they can do is get a desk over by a window, bring in an old fashioned
incandescent light bulb lamp. That will help blot out the fluorescent lights. Sometimes
wearing a hat helps, or wearing colored glasses. And you talk about this in sessions with the teachers?
They're aware of this? Oh yes.
This is a major part of my talks. It makes inexplicable things suddenly
understandable. Then you
wonder why in a certain classroom, this kid is having a tantrum because he's feeling
overwhelmed. Or the kid goes into the supermarket and throws a tantrum and it may be,
from a sensory standpoint, that he's just completely overwhelmed. Do you have another book in your head ready to come
out? I'm
thinking of doing something more on autistic thinking. Then, I do have some
livestock books
that came out recently. Humane Livestock
Handling- that's a book strictly for ranchers
and then I have a book coming out, an academic textbook on improving animal welfare,
a practical approach. It talks a lot about the auditing, how to audit things. Who reads these more technical books? That
would be veterinary students, animal science students, ranchers reading those
strictly professional
books. Thinking in Pictures, Animals in
Translation and Animals Make Us Human, those are for the general
public.
www.OpEdNews.com
Joan has been the Election Integrity Editor for OpEdNews since December 2005. She writes on a large range of subjects and does many interviews and reviews.
The views expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author
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