Change.org's autism page does not present a progressive view of autism. The Change represented on it's autism page represents no change at all. It is a media portal for the neurodiversity ideology which says that people with autism should not be cured or treated for their autism disorders, although the term "disorder" is frowned upon at Change.org.
According to the neurodiversity ideology found at Change.org autism represents variations in personality and ways of thinking. Autism is no longer a medical disorder defined by the DSM requiring treatment. Instead a social model of autism is put forward, one which views problems encountered by persons with autistic personalities as the result of society's failure to accommodate autistic personalities and ways of thinking. There is little, if any, mention of the life situations facing the severely autistic, some who live their lives in institutional care, or of self injury, or aggression, or the cognitive deficits of many persons with Autistic Disorder.
Change.org continues its subservience to neurodiversity ideology with an article by neurodiversity blogger, and Michelle Dawson disciple, Estee Klar which seriously misrepresents Canada's autism realities. Ms Klar in The Canadian Autism Climate: Too Cold For Comfort Introduction misrepresents the Canadian autism climate and attempts to pass off her views as representing the realities of Canadian autism parents.
In the article Estee Klar, now a graduate student in critical disability studies, and a long time anti-ABA ideologue, continues to advance her neurodiversity thesis that autism should not be viewed as a medical disorder. "Based on the notion that autism is a disease or something “wrong,” the government of Canada continues to endorse an intervention promoted by a series of parents in Canada."
The "notion"? Autism is defined as a disorder in the DSM. Presumably, Ms Klar as a parent of an autistic child, obtained for her child a medical diagnosis of one of the autism disorders before beginning her career as an anti-ABA advocate. Presumably there were observable behaviors or lack of development that prompted such a diagnosis. Was Ms Klar hallucinating, imagining such deficits, when she sought medical attention for her child, the attention that resulted in a medical diagnosis that Ms Klar now blithely dismisses as a "notion"?
Ms Klar is not sure, in her attack on ABA in Canada, who to blame for the fact that most Canadian provinces now provide ABA interventions to one extent or another (services that parents of autistic children in most states in the US are also fighting for from their health insurance providers):
Whatever the entry point into the foray of autism, what lies ahead is largely dictated here in Canada of what the government dictates is the proper autism “intervention.” Based on the notion that autism is a disease or something “wrong,” the government of Canada continues to endorse an intervention promoted by a series of parents in Canada.
As the quote indicates Ms Klar begins by labelling ABA as a government dictated autism intervention. Then she loses her train of thought and indicates that gee, ABA was actually "imposed" because ABA was "promoted" by a series of parents in Canada. Apart from the contradictions in this statement, blaming first the government; than a "series of parents", it illustrates the extent to which Ms Klar is out of touch with other autism parents in Canada and out of touch with any semblance of the realities confronting persons with autism and their families.
Parents in every province in Canada have fought hard to obtain ABA interventions for our children. I am one of those parents. Together with many other parents here in New Brunswick I fought hard to have government put ABA services in place by trained ABA service providers. New Brunswick went from providing no autism specific services to provision of ABA intervention by trained workers and clinical supervisors in the pre-school years and now is implementing an autism training program for teacher aides and resource teachers in New Brunswick schools.
I have also been involved across Canada meeting people from Halifax to Toronto to British Columbia working hard to achieve ABA services for autistic children in every part of Canada. It is not just " a series of parents" who are promoting ABA. Ms Klar has not been involved in such advocacy and is speaking purely as an ill informed outsider, ideologically opposed to our efforts.
Ms Klar has a more serious problem when advancing her misrepresentation that ABA is "imposed" on Canada's autistic children. The truth is, and as someone actually involved with autism parental organizations in Canada, I know this, many autistic children, including in Estee's Ontario, still languish on waiting lists to receive ABA interventions. ABA is NOT imposed, it is sought after by parents who want to help their autistic children. The waiting lists exist because so many parents want ABA for their children. Such lists are powerful evidence to refute Ms Klar's "notion" that ABA is imposed.
Nor do Governments provide expensive services because a few parents "promote" something. It was a very substantial number of parents, with too much common sense to gloss over the realities of their children's autism disorders, and with hundreds of studies and credible reviews of ABA as persuasive authorities, that resulted in governments moving across Canada to provide ABA. Not because it should be "imposed" but because most parents want ABA for their autistic children AND because to date it is the only evidence based effective intervention for autism. The most recent review confirming the evidence basis for the effectiveness of ABA was the American Academy of Pediatrics, Management of Children with Autism Disorders, (2007):
The effectiveness of ABA-based intervention in ASDs has been well documented through 5 decades of research by using single-subject methodology21,25,27,28 and in controlled studies of comprehensive early intensive behavioral intervention programs in university and community settings.29–40 Children who receive early intensive behavioral treatment have been shown to make substantial, sustained gains in IQ, language, academic performance, and adaptive behavior as well as some measures of social behavior, and their outcomes have been significantly better than those of children in control groups.31–4
American Academy of Pediatrics, Management of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2007
Ms Klar was not one of those parents who fought for effective ABA treatment for autistic children. She does not know the obstacles that had to be overcome to convince government to take action and provide ABA services. She does not know what she is talking about when she comments on Canadian autism parent advocacy.
I do know what I am talking about and many other parents in New Brunswick and every province in Canada do as well. The families in the BC cases in Auton and Hewko, the families in the Ontario Deskin Wynberg case know what ABA for autism advocacy really entails. People in Ontario that I have actually met, like Barry Hudson, Jennifer O'Brien, Norrah Whitney, Bruce McIntosh and Stefan Marinoiu know what they are talking about. I have met autism parent advocates from coast to coast like Jim Young from Nova Scotia and Jean Lewis fom British Columbia. We are not sitting at a Toronto art museum pondering social models of autism. We are dealing with the hard cold realities of life for many of our autistic children. We have been involved in the difficult advocacy necessary to help our children.
Ms. Klar misrepresents autism realities, the effectiveness of ABA as an autism intervention, and the challenges faced by Canadian parents who fought so hard to obtain ABA to benefit their children.
Estee Klar has not been involved with the parent advocacy that has resulted in ABA services being provided for autistic children in Canada. Estee Klar knows not of what she prattles.
Change.org should be ashamed of itself for promoting Estee Klar's regressive neurodiversity ideology.
I have also been involved across Canada meeting people from Halifax to Toronto to British Columbia working hard to achieve ABA services for autistic children in every part of Canada. It is not just " a series of parents" who are promoting ABA. Ms Klar has not been involved in such advocacy and is speaking purely as an ill informed outsider, ideologically opposed to our efforts.
Ms Klar has a more serious problem when advancing her misrepresentation that ABA is "imposed" on Canada's autistic children. The truth is, and as someone actually involved with autism parental organizations in Canada, I know this, many autistic children, including in Estee's Ontario, still languish on waiting lists to receive ABA interventions. ABA is NOT imposed, it is sought after by parents who want to help their autistic children. The waiting lists exist because so many parents want ABA for their children. Such lists are powerful evidence to refute Ms Klar's "notion" that ABA is imposed.
Nor do Governments provide expensive services because a few parents "promote" something. It was a very substantial number of parents, with too much common sense to gloss over the realities of their children's autism disorders, and with hundreds of studies and credible reviews of ABA as persuasive authorities, that resulted in governments moving across Canada to provide ABA. Not because it should be "imposed" but because most parents want ABA for their autistic children AND because to date it is the only evidence based effective intervention for autism. The most recent review confirming the evidence basis for the effectiveness of ABA was the American Academy of Pediatrics, Management of Children with Autism Disorders, (2007):
The effectiveness of ABA-based intervention in ASDs has been well documented through 5 decades of research by using single-subject methodology21,25,27,28 and in controlled studies of comprehensive early intensive behavioral intervention programs in university and community settings.29–40 Children who receive early intensive behavioral treatment have been shown to make substantial, sustained gains in IQ, language, academic performance, and adaptive behavior as well as some measures of social behavior, and their outcomes have been significantly better than those of children in control groups.31–4
American Academy of Pediatrics, Management of Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders, 2007
Ms Klar was not one of those parents who fought for effective ABA treatment for autistic children. She does not know the obstacles that had to be overcome to convince government to take action and provide ABA services. She does not know what she is talking about when she comments on Canadian autism parent advocacy.
I do know what I am talking about and many other parents in New Brunswick and every province in Canada do as well. The families in the BC cases in Auton and Hewko, the families in the Ontario Deskin Wynberg case know what ABA for autism advocacy really entails. People in Ontario that I have actually met, like Barry Hudson, Jennifer O'Brien, Norrah Whitney, Bruce McIntosh and Stefan Marinoiu know what they are talking about. I have met autism parent advocates from coast to coast like Jim Young from Nova Scotia and Jean Lewis fom British Columbia. We are not sitting at a Toronto art museum pondering social models of autism. We are dealing with the hard cold realities of life for many of our autistic children. We have been involved in the difficult advocacy necessary to help our children.
Ms. Klar misrepresents autism realities, the effectiveness of ABA as an autism intervention, and the challenges faced by Canadian parents who fought so hard to obtain ABA to benefit their children.
Estee Klar has not been involved with the parent advocacy that has resulted in ABA services being provided for autistic children in Canada. Estee Klar knows not of what she prattles.
Change.org should be ashamed of itself for promoting Estee Klar's regressive neurodiversity ideology.
autism
"Instead a social model of autism is put forward, one which views problems encountered by persons with autistic personalities as the result of society's failure to accommodate autistic personalities and ways of thinking." When I first started research, I thought that this was an issue peculiar to autism...but it's in the general "disability" material as well...I really have trouble with how someone can come up with this sort of nonsense...it damages alot of good work finally being done. I wonder how/why this type of thinking has arisen. It would make a good MA topic.
ReplyDeleteIsn't it fun to assume what other people's experiences are, Harold?
ReplyDeleteI am happy my son Adam does not have to be subjugated to ABA therapy.
I believe that our children deserve better services than this.
Hi Harold,
ReplyDeleteThe only change change.org effectively advocates is to turn back the clock on proven science and let those that need ABA again become institutionalized and excluded from society. I think this fits their agenda of excluding the more sever end of the scale afflicted individuals. Why such an agenda exists is beyond my understanding. I think they do not want to be associated with those that truly need the help – gee, I wonder if any of them “just” drive trains.
Well Estee, IF I have wrongfully assumed something please point it out and I will provide a correction/retraction.
ReplyDeleteSubjugated to ABA? An autism intervention found effective by decades of studies and by such agencies as the AAP, the MADSEC Autism Task Force, the NY State Department of Health, the US Surgeon General and the Association for Science in Autism Treatment?
I don't know how much you actually know about ABA but my son enjoys ABA therapy and looks forward to it at home and in school.
Claire
ReplyDeleteI agree that it is nonsense. Parents don't seek autism diagnoses for their children for the fun of it. I knew little about autism before Conor's diagnosis 11 years ago and I never suspected autism. We just sought medical attention, as concerned parents,because of some obvious developmental deficits. Those deficits are real, not socially imposed.
Barry
ReplyDeleteI have no idea what ever possessed Change.org to embrace such a regressive ideology, one which seeks to prevent autistic children from receiving effective evidence based interventions. Heaven forbid that a full evidence based, safe, cure might someday be found.
"ABA is NOT imposed, it is sought after by parents who want to help their autistic children. The waiting lists exist because so many parents want ABA for their children. Such lists are powerful evidence to refute Ms Klar's "notion" that ABA is imposed."
ReplyDeleteGreat point. I don't understand how her son would be subjugated to ABA. Don't apply for services if you don't want them. Want something else? Find some evidence for it, and request that therapy to be offered in addition to ABA services.
Guess Mrs. Klar never hugs her child after he/she does something that makes her proud. Guess she never tells her child, "You did great!" when her child excels at some homework. Guess she doesn't beleive her child should communicate when he/she wants a drink or something to eat. Heaven forbid her child be SUBJUGATED to positive reinforcement.
I'm happy my younger son is no longer subjected to TVCC's IBI/ABA program. That... was cruel.. there is no excuse for a child to sit 5+ hours at a day and be trained like Pavlov's dog.
ReplyDeleteI am happy that under the Ontario School System's PPM 140, the use of ABA principals has allowed for an appropriate token style program to be put in place for my elder son to teach him how to meet classroom expectations in behaviour, socialization and school work completion. He is thriving, keeping up with his peers both socially and accademically, now that he can cope in a busy Gr 4 classroom.
Although both call themselves ABA, they are not the same program.
When the Neurodiverse crowd actually advocates for education for children with Autism... I will believe in their message. Allowing someone to "evolve" and expect society to change for them.... won't happen. Also, why would my children want to be second class citizens when they can become individuals with their own lives to live.
S.
The Ontario IEP besides sections for accommodation or modification of programming, has sections for Behavioural, Social and Communication. Starting this term they are to have only one MEASURABLE goal in each. All other goals may be worked on my the teacher but only the one is to be MEASURED.
ReplyDeleteMeasuring falls under the Provinces PPM 140. Whether Estee likes it or not.. her son is getting ABA.
http://www.edu.gov.on.ca/extra/eng/ppm/140.html
INCORPORATING METHODS OF APPLIED BEHAVIOUR ANALYSIS (ABA) INTO PROGRAMS FOR STUDENTS WITH AUTISM SPECTRUM DISORDERS (ASD)
It's not the never-ending, sitting at a table rote learning of the Children's Hospital programs in this Province. That I would NEVER have agreed to.
But it uses the concepts of ABA to help teach. And the use of measuring data to see if it's working or not. As I was told they aren't going to measure daily, but randomly. Therefore, they know if the goal is attainable or not. If not, can they meet that goal or do they need to find another goal to reach.
S.
Estee Klar seems to go off on a tangent on the topic of ABA evidence effective based interventions.Ideologies are fine,until it comes time to implement them in our every day life.This is where she should make a reality check.Has Estee come up with another more better proven intervention that the "rest" of us have not yet heard of? The last time I checked nobody was trying to change the identity, personality or individuality of any child with autism.Supporting them to a higher level of progression to be able to cope with life's every day social and communicative challenges, is the key point.If this entails implementing ABA intervention, to support this argument,well then be it. Estee Klar will just have to get over it,and face the music to the tune of implementing positive ,effective and progressive treatments: such as ABA.
ReplyDeleteABA brought my son out of his shell. He always worked best with me in that style. I never knew it was called ABA or Verbal Behavior. it was just how H learned best. I always say that ABA/VB has been a god send. It just works so well for us.
ReplyDeleteMaybe some people have had bad experiences because the people doing the therapy were not trained correctly.
As for this topic with autism not being a medical condition ... that is like saying that schizophrenia is not a medical condition. It is a neurological disorder. WE in the USA are fighting to get this more recognized so that we can get it treated as such with medical insurance.
this drives me bonkers to know that people are trying to say it is not.
Sara
ReplyDeleteGood luck with your fight for ABA coverage in the US.