(Press-News.org) An innovative program from UNC's Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute (FPG) and 6 partner universities is preparing students with autism for life after high school.
"Public high schools may be one of the last best hopes for adolescents with autism—and for their families," said FPG director Samuel L. Odom. "Many of these students will face unemployment and few social ties after school ends."
According to Odom, teachers and other professionals in the schools work hard to achieve beneficial results for students with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). But positive outcomes remain elusive, given the scarcity of specific programs in high schools designed to help adolescents with ASD.
To fill this gap, Odom and other scientists formed the Center on Secondary Education for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders (CSESA).
"We developed our approach from research in several fields," said Odom, CSESA's principal investigator. "Because of the complex educational needs of many students with ASD, it was important to develop a comprehensive program for high schools."
CSESA focuses on understanding emotions, developing friendships, and social problem-solving. Early results at a high school in the Raleigh-Durham, N.C. area show that student groups designed to bring together adolescents with and without ASD have helped them engage with one other more often.
"Even a simple hallway 'hello' between students with autism and their peers is more likely now," said Kara Hume, CSESA's project director and co-principal investigator.
CSESA also addresses literacy skills, which can be limited in many students with ASD. At Myers Park High School (MPHS) in Charlotte, N.C., the program helped with Christopher Stickell's inclusion in an English class.
"Not only did my son have access to a wider world than his self-contained classroom, but the students in the English class had some of their pre-conceived notions about autism shattered," said Lois Stickell. "Many were surprised when Chris read aloud a passage from 'Julius Caesar.'"
"We help develop basic high school survival skills," Hume said, adding that another cornerstone of the program is its emphasis on promoting responsibility, independence, and self-management.
According to Odom, many teens with ASD continue to live with their parents after high school. "Not surprisingly, parents worry about the future as they anticipate their child's transition out of the public schools," he said.
"CSESA has provided opportunities for greater collaboration and relationship building with the families who have attended 'Transitioning Together' sessions," said Phyllis Alston, the exceptional children teacher for compliance at MPHS. Each week, CSESA staff and school district personnel lead these discussion groups with families.
"We became aware of resources available that without CSESA we may not have been made aware of," said Faith Hamilton, whose teenager will be attending Central Piedmont Community College in the fall to study photography. "My son gained confidence and his grades improved this year."
According to Odom, built into the CSESA program's design are features that help to install it quickly and successfully, such as "autism teams," which spearhead efforts within the schools. The program also uses coaching to provide feedback on new practices as teachers implement them.
Although most complex programs may take 5 to 7 years to put into place, Odom said schools in N.C. and 5 other states began using CSESA's approach within weeks, and he projects that they will be administering the program on their own within 2 ½ years.
"CSESA will expand to 60 more schools over the next 3 years," he added. "We hope a lot more students with autism spectrum disorders will be able to leave high school better prepared for the challenges they'll face."
INFORMATION:
Contact:
Samuel L. Odom
Director, UNC's Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute
Principal Investigator, Center on Secondary Education for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders
slodom@unc.edu
919-966-4250 (office)
Kara Hume
Scientist, UNC's Frank Porter Graham Child Development Institute
Co-Principal Investigator, Center on Secondary Education for Students with Autism Spectrum Disorders
kara.hume@unc.edu
919-843-2291 (office)
New program for students with autism offers hope after high school
Teachers and other professionals in the schools work hard to achieve beneficial results for students with autism, but positive outcomes remain elusive
2014-03-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Darwin: It's not all sexual (selection)
2014-03-05
Since the days of Darwin, scientists have considered bird song to be an exclusively male trait, resulting from sexual selection. Now a team of researchers from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC), the University of Melbourne in Australia, Leiden University in the Netherlands and The Australian National University says that's not the whole story.
The team used information from several sources, including the Handbook of the Birds of the World. Their survey included birds from all over the globe, but focused on early-diverging Australasian lineages, which ...
Playing with Barbie dolls could limit girls' career choices, study shows
2014-03-05
CORVALLIS, Ore. – In one of the first experiments to explore the influence of fashion dolls, an Oregon State University researcher has found that girls who play with Barbie dolls see fewer career options for themselves than for boys.
"Playing with Barbie has an effect on girls' ideas about their place in the world," said Aurora M. Sherman, an associate professor in the School of Psychological Science at OSU. "It creates a limit on the sense of what's possible for their future. While it's not a massive effect, it is a measurable and statistically significant effect."
Findings ...
First step towards 'programmable materials'
2014-03-05
Although the "programmable material" still only works in a one-dimensional model construction, it has already demonstrated it unusual capabilities: The research project entitled Phononic Crystal with Adaptive Connectivity has just been published in the journal Advanced Materials. The first step towards mechanical components with freely programmable properties has thus been achieved.
The working model used by the researchers consists of a one-meter by one-centimeter aluminum plate that is one millimeter thick. This sheet-metal strip can vibrate at different frequencies. ...
Research shows patient satisfaction can be high, even in emergency care situations
2014-03-05
MINNEAPOLIS, MN – March 4, 2013 – The Minneapolis Heart Institute Foundation (MHIF) today announced the results of survey research aimed at discovering patient and family satisfaction with acute care transfers for patients with STEMI (ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction), a severe heart attack best treated quickly with specialized care. The results, based on 98 patient and 80 family surveys, suggest that patient satisfaction with care decisions and communication can be high, even in emergency care situations that require rapid and complex decision making and, in ...
Researchers identify key enzyme found in bacteria responsible for heart valve disease
2014-03-05
A disease-causing bacterium found in the mouth needs manganese, a trace mineral, in order to cause a serious heart infection, according to a preclinical study led by researchers at Virginia Commonwealth University Philips Institute for Oral Health Research in the School of Dentistry.
The findings, which may solve a longstanding mystery of why some bacteria need manganese to cause disease, provide possible new targets for antibiotics.
Researchers from VCU and MIT have been studying the bacterium Streptococcus sanguinis, which lives in the mouth, to understand its role ...
New shrinking gel steers tooth tissue formation
2014-03-05
VIDEO:
When the temperature rises to just below body temperature, this biocompatible gel shrinks dramatically within minutes, compressing tooth-precursor cells (green) enclosed within it.
Click here for more information.
BOSTON, March 5, 2014 — A bit of pressure from a new shrinking, sponge-like gel is all it takes to turn transplanted unspecialized cells into cells that lay down minerals and begin to form teeth.
The bioinspired gel material could one day help repair or replace ...
Prehospital alerts let stroke patients skip the emergency room
2014-03-05
Philadelphia, Pa. (March 4, 2014) – Prehospital stroke alerts by emergency medical services (EMS) personnel can shorten the time to effective treatment with "clot-busting" drugs for patients with stroke, according to a report in the March issue of Neurosurgery, official journal of the Congress of Neurological Surgeons. The journal is published by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, a part of Wolters Kluwer Health.
Dr. Mandy J. Binning and colleagues at the Capital Institute for Neurosciences (CIN) at Capital Health, Trenton and Pennington, N.J., implemented a prehospital stroke ...
Your face says it all? Not so fast
2014-03-05
It's a concept that had become universally understood: humans experience six basic emotions—happiness, sadness, anger, fear, disgust, and surprise—and use the same set of facial movements to express them. What's more, we can recognize emotions on another's face, whether that person hails from Boston or Borneo.
The only problem with this concept, according to Northeastern University Distinguished Professor of Psychology Lisa Feldman Barrett, is that it isn't true at all.
For nearly two decades, Barrett has been tracking down the research that established this misconception ...
B-cells aggravate autoimmune diseases
2014-03-05
This news release is available in German.
Scientists in Freiburg may have discovered a fundamental aggravating factor in autoimmune diseases. If B-lymphocytes lack the protein PTP1B, the cells will become hyperactive for stimulatory signals and can thus promote an autoimmune attack. This study offers an additional explanation to how B-cells regulate an immune response.
In Germany, approximately 800,000 people suffer from rheumatoid arthritis. In this progressive disease, a person's own immune system attacks and destroys connective tissue. However, the most important ...
With flip of wrist, interventional radiologists treat uterine fibroids
2014-03-05
FAIRFAX, Va.—Interventional radiologists have devised a new way to access a woman's fibroids—by flipping her wrist and treating via an arm not groin artery—to nonsurgically shrink noncancerous growths in the muscular wall of the uterus. Researchers found this to be less painful and traumatic for women, allowing them to immediately sit up and move after uterine fibroid embolization (UFE)—with no overnight stay, according to a March article in the Society of Interventional Radiology's flagship publication, the Journal of Vascular and Interventional Radiology.
"Improving ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Bipartisan members of congress relaunch Congressional Peripheral Artery Disease (PAD) Caucus with event that brings together lawmakers, medical experts, and patient advocates to address critical gap i
Antibody-drug conjugate achieves high response rates as frontline treatment in aggressive, rare blood cancer
Retina-inspired cascaded van der Waals heterostructures for photoelectric-ion neuromorphic computing
Seashells and coconut char: A coastal recipe for super-compost
Feeding biochar to cattle may help lock carbon in soil and cut agricultural emissions
Researchers identify best strategies to cut air pollution and improve fertilizer quality during composting
International research team solves mystery behind rare clotting after adenoviral vaccines or natural adenovirus infection
The most common causes of maternal death may surprise you
A new roadmap spotlights aging as key to advancing research in Parkinson’s disease
Research alert: Airborne toxins trigger a unique form of chronic sinus disease in veterans
University of Houston professor elected to National Academy of Engineering
UVM develops new framework to transform national flood prediction
Study pairs key air pollutants with home addresses to track progression of lost mobility through disability
Keeping your mind active throughout life associated with lower Alzheimer’s risk
TBI of any severity associated with greater chance of work disability
Seabird poop could have been used to fertilize Peru's Chincha Valley by at least 1250 CE, potentially facilitating the expansion of its pre-Inca society
Resilience profiles during adversity predict psychological outcomes
AI and brain control: A new system identifies animal behavior and instantly shuts down the neurons responsible
Suicide hotline calls increase with rising nighttime temperatures
What honey bee brain chemistry tells us about human learning
Common anti-seizure drug prevents Alzheimer’s plaques from forming
Twilight fish study reveals unique hybrid eye cells
Could light-powered computers reduce AI’s energy use?
Rebuilding trust in global climate mitigation scenarios
Skeleton ‘gatekeeper’ lining brain cells could guard against Alzheimer’s
HPV cancer vaccine slows tumor growth, extends survival in preclinical model
How blood biomarkers can predict trauma patient recovery days in advance
People from low-income communities smoke more, are more addicted and are less likely to quit
No association between mRNA COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy and autism in children, new research shows
Twist-controlled magnetism grows beyond the moiré
[Press-News.org] New program for students with autism offers hope after high schoolTeachers and other professionals in the schools work hard to achieve beneficial results for students with autism, but positive outcomes remain elusive







