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Book Title Author Category for Kids, Teens, Or Parents the Family For Kids, Teens, or Book Title Author Category Parents The Family ADHD Solution Dr. Mark Bertin ADHD PARENTS Organizing the Disorganized Child Martin Kutscher & Marcella Moran ADHD PARENTS From Emotions to Advocacy Peter Wright & Pam Wright advocacy PARENTS Scaredy Squirrel (series) Melanie Watt anxiety KIDS Ron Rapee, Sue Spence, Vanessa Helping Your Anxious Child Cobham, Ann Wignall anxiety PARENTS Brotherly Feelings: Me, My Emotions, and My Brother with Asperger's Syndrome Sam Frender and Robin Schiffmiller autism KIDS The Real Experts: Readings for Parents of Autistic Children Michelle Sutton autism PARENTS The ABCs of Autism Acceptance Sparrow Rose Jones autism PARENTS Ido in Autismland Ido Kedar autism PARENTS The Reason I Jump: The Inner Voice of a Thirteen-Year-Old Boy with Autism Naoki Higashida autism PARENTS What Every Autistic Girl Wishes Her Parents Knew Autism Women's Network autism PARENTS Neurotribes Steve Silberman autism PARENTS My Name is Ryan and I have Autism Rachel Leydon autism PARENTS Ten Things Every Child With Autism Wishes You Knew Ellen Notbohm autism PARENTS Aspergirls – Empowering Females with Asperger Syndrome Rudy Simone autism PARENTS Look Me In the Eye John Elder Robison autism PARENTS Thinking in Pictures Temple Grandin autism PARENTS Be Different John Elder Robison autism PARENTS Autism in Your Classroom Deborah Fein and Michelle Dunn autism PARENTS School Success for Kids with Aspergers Stephan Silverman & Rich Weinfeld autism PARENTS Raising Your Spirited Child Mary Sheedy Kurcinka behavior PARENTS Discover Your Child's Learning Styles Mariaemma Willis and Victoria Hodson behavior PARENTS Lost at School Ross W. Greene behavior PARENTS The Explosive Child Ross W. Greene, PhD behaviour PARENTS Your X year Old (where X = an age - whole series!) Louise Bates Ames behaviour PARENTS Fish in a Tree Lynda Mullaly Hunt dyslexia KIDS Bringing Up Bebe Pamela Druckerman eating/behaviors PARENTS The Feelings Book – The Care and Keeping of your Emotions Dr Lynda Madison emotions KIDS The Mindful Teen Dzung X. Vo emotions TEENS The Feelings Book Todd Parr emotions PRIMARY How Are You Peeling? Foods with Moods Saxton Freymann emotions PRIMARY Mr. Men & Little Miss book series Roger Hargreaves emotions/social PRIMARY A Smart Girls Guide to Liking Herself – even on the bad days Laurie Zelinger self-esteem KIDS When the Labels Don't Fit Barbara Probst self-esteem PARENTS Your Child's Strengths Jenifer Fox self-esteem PARENTS Wonder R. J. Palacio self-esteem KID/TEEN Karen A. Smith, Ph.D. and Karen R. The Sensory Sensitive Child Gouze, PhD. sensory PARENTS Lindsey Biel, M.A. ORT/L and Nancy Raising a Sensory Smart Child Peske sensory PARENTS The Out-of-Sync Child Carol Stock Kranowitz M.A. sensory PARENTS The Highly Sensitive Child Elaine N Aron, PhD sensory PARENTS Dancing Home Alma Flor Ada social KIDS Michelle Garcia Winner and Pamela You Are a Social Detective Crooke social KIDS Curiously Social and Socially Curious Michelle Garcia Winner social TEENS Stand Up for Yourself and Your Friends – Dealing with Bullies and Bossiness and Finding a Better Way. Patti Kelley Criswell and Angela Martini social KIDS Little Girls Can Be Mean Michelle Anthony and Reina Lindert social PARENTS Queen Bees and Wannabe’s Rosalind Wiseman social PARENTS Odd Girl Out Rachel Simmons social PARENTS A Smart Girls Guide to Knowing What to Say Patti Kelley Criswell and Angela Martini social KIDS A Smart Girls Guide to Friendship Troubles Patti Kelley Criswell and Angela Martini social KIDS A Smart Girls Guide to Middle School Julie Williams social KIDS Social Fortune or Social Fate Michelle Garcia Winner social TEENS A Bargain for Frances Russell and Lilian Hoban social PRIMARY Hold on to Your Kids Gordon Neufeld social PARENTS.
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    1 | [footer text here] 2 | [footer text here] • The reason I wanted to give this talk is because I have come to understand that a lot of what we know for sure about autism, just isn’t so. We have developed services for autistic people which are based on the belief that autism is primarily a psychological problem characterized by deficits in social understanding, restricted behaviors and interests, and cognition. But I have come to believe that autism is better accommodated and supported when it is understood as a neurological condition. [pause] Increasingly, people working in a neurological paradigm are achieving remarkably good outcomes, especially for those who don’t speak or whose speech is unreliable communication, and for those with prominent symptoms of dyspraxia. Dyspraxia is difficulty coordinating movement. 3 | [footer text here] • Ten years ago, we thought that autism was a thing. Find the gene! Maybe it’s vaccines? It’s an epidemic and a crisis! We’ve mostly moved through that, thankfully. But remnants of it sometimes rear its ugly head on occasion. • A diagnosis of autism doesn’t correlate with any specific trait or characteristic. People can be super smart or have significant cognitive challenges. They can be organized or have executive function problems. They can be a competitive surfer or use a wheelchair. They may or may not have seizures. They may have normal, very acute or scrambled senses. They may be blind or deaf. They may be polite and regulated to a fault, or have significant anxiety, behavioral, or mental health problems. • Historically, autism was defined by psychiatrists who were rooted in early 20th Century cultural ideas about intelligence, eugenics, and social hygiene.
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  • The Persistence of Fad Interventions in the Face of Negative Scientific Evidence: Facilitated Communication for Autism As a Case Example
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  • Book Review: the Reason I Jump: One Boy's Voice from the Silence of Autism by Naoki Higashida
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