I'm
reading Uniquely
Human: A Different Way of Seeing Autism, by
Dr. Barry M. Prizant, with Tom Fields-Meyer. I'm not entirely sure
what the "with" means here -- did they write together? Did
Tom edit for narrative, since telling narratives is apparently his
thing? Dunno. I'd like to be able to like this book, since it's
pointing out that trying to eliminate stuff we do just because it's
autistic isn't a great idea, and since it was recommended to me.
Anyways,
I know how my commentary tends to go, and I'm dividing this up. Part
1 is all the stuff that isn't in a chapter: cover, reviews that are
printed in the book, book jacket, contents, authors notes,
introductions, the index, that sort of thing.
The
first thing I notice is that Temple Grandin loves his approach. That
makes me suspect that the book is 1) going to be better than, say,
Autism Speaks stuff, but 2) probably aspie elitist1.
On
the book jacket: Everyone's using person-first language2,
and it's all children3
with, not people with. That's expected, but not a great sign. I know
Michelle Dawson is good, but I'm not so familiar with Geraldine
Dawson. Are they related? I don't know the Rabbi. I know Tony
Attwood, and his appearance is not a good sign.
Famous, claims to be an ally, and his comedy is full of jokes that
really are at the expense of the autistic people in the room. Doesn't
like having this pointed out. I'm not sure who Elaine Hall is, but I
approve of her stating that the true experts are autistic people. I
get very nervous seeing that she founded something called the Miracle
Project and wrote a book about unlocking autism.
Moving
to the inside of the book jacket: We start with criticism of how
autism is typically "portrayed as a checklist of deficits,"
which is a good sign because that's 1) typically what happens and 2)
a big problem. The shift Dr. Prizant is suggesting, that we think of
autistic behavior as coping methods for an overwhelming world, is not
new but the idea of explaining some of what we do that way
is reasonable. My isolation headphones, for example, are exactly
that.
The
inside "advance praise" comes from some names I know and
some I don't. The autistic people on that list are both white authors
who run aspie elitist, and I still see the goal of "help"
to "gain a greater social understanding," as in
helping us learn to understand (and presumably
imitate) how other folks social. Which is admittedly useful, but
without helping other folks understand how we social
too it's one-sided. I'm thinking back to "What
would meeting you halfway be?" here.
The
table of contents doesn't have much that jumps out at me, though one
chapter title does: The Real Experts. Since I totally just did
the cover art and wrote a contribution for a
book by the same name, I take a glance. Seems to be about actual
autistic people/people with autism, which is good. I don't know the
language preferences of the specific people so here's both just in
case. (I also notice page counts: there are 12 chapters, and only 1
occupies fewer pages than The Real Experts. Hrm. If we're the real
experts, wouldn't we get a bit more space?)
Looking at the author's note, I see
that it addresses some of the language cues that made me nervous. He
doesn't say why person-first
language is his preference, just that it is. (Why?)
That's not satisfying. The occasional reference to Aspergers I get.
Given how publication schedules and writing work, he probably wrote a
good chunk of the book (the draft submitted to the publisher?)
before the distinction was dropped in the official release of DSM-5.
But! The way he's using it lines up with an error that is a personal
pet peeve of mine. Just because a person is tested as
having average or higher cognitive and language ability does not mean
their label was Aspergers under DSM-IV, or that it should have been4.
*Waves hi.* Ding-dong, you are wrong.
In the
introduction, Dr. Prizant expresses concern over the environment of
fear and anxiety around autism, where parents are super scared. I'm
glad to see that, because yeah the fear is a problem. Of course, he's
not really saying anything about where this fear comes from. (Because
doing so involves pointing at colleagues, at organizations where
colleagues work, and at resources he suggests?) Also, when asking
“which treatment will succeed?” can we also ask what success
means?
I like
many of his examples here: pointing out that everything he's seen an
autistic person do, he's also seen neurotypicals do, if at a
different age or under different circumstances is a move I approve
of. (I also think it's important to get into the differences of when
and why, but that's different from thinking similarities between
autistic people and non-autistic people are irrelevant or shouldn't
be discussed.)
I like
the statement about learning from autistic people, though I have to
question how “rare” the “ability to explain their own
experience of having autism” really is. Is it that it's rare to be
able to? Or is it that through experiences where professionals
conclude our ways of being and acting are to be eliminated without
concern for why, and through getting asked the same
questions again and again from parents who want us to translate their
children, treating us as
resources rather than people, we learn not to explain this stuff.
It's ignored because our supposed lack of theory of mind means we
“can't understand what it's like to be ourselves,” and it's
ignored because the parent really wanted to know how to get the kid
to stop rather than
what the purpose was, and it gets more repetitive than even we want
to be. Remember that explaining why we did the thing the staff person
didn't like can be taken as further noncompliance. Are you sure
it's that we mostly can't?
I now
turn to the back of the book. The resources guide looks like a mixed
bag. A lot of the titles make me question the perspectives and goals
of the authors – intervention “for autism” is rarely a good
sign, for reasons that Dr. Prizant actually pointed out in
his own introduction, please follow your own logic.
Floortime is “gentler” but definitely about engaging with the kid
in their way in order to try to draw them into engaging and acting in
neurotypical ways. I would be shocked
if anything with “unlocking autism” in the title is decent, and I
know enough about the social thinking curriculum to run the other
way, far and fast. Pointing to AAC resources is important5,
though, and Paula Kluth writes good things, including You're
going to love this kid. I follow
PrAACtical AAC and they're mostly good.
Websites
and organizations are again … interesting. Anyone who suggests
Autism Speaks as a resource rather than as a group to avoid loses
MAJOR points in my book6.
If you're talking about the fear and anxiety around diagnosis in the
same source where you suggest them, you lose points for inconsistency
as well as for suggesting that organization. You don't get to have it
both ways. Have you read
the stuff they put out?? ASAN and GRASP are at least run by actually
autistic people. Autcom has some autistic leadership but after
parents who used to be board members wore badges indicated
they still were while defending inaccessibility to autistic people,
yeah, I don't trust them. Also Autism Society of America impeded
an autistic attendee in contacting police after she was stabbed
at their conference7.
That's a thing that happened.
Without
any explanation of what “meaningful progress” means, I can't
speak to the SCERTS model. Maybe I'll see more about that in the
chapters? I'm a bit nervous when social communication comes up.
Looking
at the index now:
Huh.
The names of autistic people I recognize look awfully white and
middle to upper class. Also fairly aspie elitist, and none of them
show up on that many pages. I wonder how much their ideas are
actually getting used, then. Echolalia as communication gets quite a
few pages. So does adults as a cause of emotional dysregulation.
Trauma is mentioned. These seem like good things.
After
reading the not-chapter things, my bet is on:
"Pulls
decent to good ideas from autistic adults and repackages them to be
palatable for a wider (parent-centric) audience, but chooses autistic
adults who are white, middle to upper class, and usually aspie
elitist. May or may not cite autistic sources properly, depending on
how much he's really pulling from them. Also doesn't follow his own
logic of re-interpreting things as not pathological as far as he
could."
Part 2 here.
Part 2 here.
Footnotes!
1 When
I say aspie elitism, I'm talking about something very like what Mel
Baggs means by aspie
supremacy, but without needing the claim that the “aspies”
are better than the neurotypical people – it's just about the
relationship based on perceived/assumed place within
the autistic spectrum that isn't actually linear anyways.
2 This
tells me Dr. Prizant is quite familiar with the parent and
professional perspectives. In the authors note he says he
understands and respects “why some adults with autism prefer the
label 'autistic.'” Which, I appreciate the gesture, but no. Some
autistic adults prefer the
label autistic (and some adults with autism prefer the label “with
autism,” this one isn't about language per se but respecting
identity and choice.) As in, the ones who prefer the label
“autistic” should be referred to as “autistic” even if
you're going with person-first as your default. Here's hoping he got
that right at the specific people level even though he missed it at
the group level.
3 Treating
disabled people, especially intellectually, developmentally, and
cognitively disabled people, as forever-children is a big problem.
So is acting like autism is some “new” thing that only affects
children because of how new it is, as opposed to something where
there are a ton of un- or mis-identified autistic adults running
around … and a lot who didn't survive. He does point out in the authors note that things often apply to teens and adults as well, but why not just say "people" when that's the case?
4 Yes,
I know people who had speech delays that made them ineligible for
the Aspergers diagnosis who got that label anyways because they
learned to speak before the evaluation happened. Back in 2012 I saw
an Australian study that suggested fully half the
people who'd gotten either the Aspergers or the PDD-NOS label
actually qualified for “Autistic disorder,” which means their
diagnosis was wrong –
you weren't supposed to give either of those two when criteria for
“Autistic disorder” were met. And a lot of these incorrect
labels? Are because people falsely assume
average or higher performance on IQ tests and language tests implies
Aspergers. 1) This is a pet peeve and Dr. Prizant just hit it with
his description of who'll get referred to with Aspergers. 2) If
anyone knows the formal citation so I can point at it instead of
just “I remember seeing” that would be great.
6 I've
got a whole “Problem
with Autism Speaks” tag on my blog for a reason,
folks. Sam
Harvey's masters thesis also discusses some … issues with
their rhetoric and the results.
7 Link
is to a picture of the scar. Check the description and the comments
of the photo from the story.
"I know Michelle Dawson is good, but I'm not so familiar with Geraldine Dawson. Are they related?”
ReplyDeleteI hope not! Geraldine Dawson is an autistic-hating clinical psychologist and eugenics researcher who used to be Chief Science Officer for Autism $peaks. An endorsement by her is a bad sign indeed.
Well that's unfortunate.
DeleteI haven't read this book although I probably should. Or maybe I will just read your posts.
ReplyDeleteI HAVE read the SCERTS model 2 volume handbook. I rate SCERTS as Not Terrible on the Nightengale Autism Resource Rating Scale, which is actually a really good rating from me. I just made up that scale but I kind of like it, the NARRS.
A piece of information you may not have is that Barry Prizant did his research (not sure if masters or doctoral, possibly both) over 30 years ago on the functions of echolalia. Not surprisingly, he found it has functions. I read his thesis/dissertation/whatever it was about a month after I wrote my own list of proposed functions which occurred after a temper tantrum when someone at work called echolalia "nonfunctional" again:
http://nightengalesknd.livejournal.com/101853.html
(Darmok and the developmental pediatrician at Tenagra)
The SCERTS model rates as Not Terrible in my mind because it makes some effort to recognize autistic perspectives and autistic learning styles. It recognizes sensory needs and needs for breaks and multiple communication methods. It is pro AAC. I don't know any other named therapy/model that does those things.
But it privileges play with non-disabled children over solo play or play with other autistics. It privileges certain kinds of play over others. It privileges verbal speech over other forms of communication And possibly most infuriating of all, it privileges spontaneous language over echolalia, and this from the guy who literally wrote the paper on the functions of echolalia.
I wrote about it more here
http://nightengalesknd.livejournal.com/102492.html (Fun is fun so long as it's fun)
Anyway. I look forward to reading the rest of your reading.
I'm reading at a rate so that I can do 1 chapter post per weekday, so I *just* got to the bit where he did research on the functions of echolalia today!
ReplyDeleteAnd seeing that (plus your comment on SCERTS) gives me two reactions: 1) ok that's a citation I want and 2) OH COME ON FOLLOW YOUR OWN LOGIC TO ITS CONCLUSIONS.
(The OH COME ON is directed at Dr. Prizant, not at you, Nightengale, to be clear just in case. I agree with the things you said.)
DeleteYes, I get what you meant since I had the same reaction - read your own research!
DeleteMe again, I come bearing citations. That's echolalic from Greeks Bearing Gifts. I come bearing links to abstracts also. I acquired these via Google Scholar "Prizant echolalia" and there's a few other articles in there I haven't read.
ReplyDeletePrizant, Barry M., and Judith F. Duchan. "The functions of immediate echolalia in autistic children." Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders 46.3 (1981): 241-249.
http://jshd.pubs.asha.org/article.aspx?articleid=1774931&resultclick=1
Prizant, Barry M., and Patrick J. Rydell. "Analysis of functions of delayed echolalia in autistic children." Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research 27.2 (1984): 183-192.
http://jslhr.pubs.asha.org/article.aspx?articleid=1778014&resultclick=1
Could it be the Real Experts chapter is the second shortest because the Real Experts use language in a way that is information-dense?
ReplyDeleteIt's possible, I guess I'll find out!
DeleteI don't trust it though.