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Communication Disorders

Temple Grandin to Speak in Kirksville Nov 30

When: Friday, November 30, 2007, Registration 8:15, welcome at 8:30
ending at 4:00 PM

What: Special workshop on autism presented by Temple Grandin

Who: Intended primarily for students, educators and clinicians

Where: Activities Room, Student Union Bldg, Truman State University

Dr. Grandin is well known for both her expertise on autism and her expertise in livestock handling equipment. Her Friday workshop about autism is being co-sponsored by the Region II Council for Developmental Disabilities and the Truman State University Department of Communication Disorders. 

She will be giving a public presentation about her livestock work at the annual Cattle Association Meeting that weekend. The Friday workshop will be about autism and is intended for a professional audience. There is a $95 fee, which includes lunch. Seating is limited. For more information about registering for the workshop and other arrangements, students should contact Ms. Passe and members of the public should contact Donna Brown at 1-800-621-6082, or donna.brown@dmh.mo.gov.

From Grandin's website:

"Temple Grandin, Ph.D., is inarguably the most accomplished and well-known adult with autism in the world. She has been featured on major television programs, such as "ABC's Primetime Live", the "Today Show", "Larry King Live", "48 Hours" and "20/20" and written up in national publications, such as Time magazine, People magazine, Forbes, U.S. News and World Report, and New York Times. Among numerous other recognitions by media, Bravo Cable did a half-hour show on her life, and she was one of the "challenged" people featured in the best-selling book, Anthropologist from Mars.

Dr. Grandin didn't talk until she was three and a half years old, communicating her frustration instead by screaming, peeping and humming. In 1950, she was labeled "autistic," and her parents were told she should be institutionalized. She tells her story of "groping her way from the far side of darkness" in her book Emergence: Labeled Autistic, a book which stunned the world because, until its publication, most professionals and parents assumed being diagnosed "autistic" was virtually a death sentence to achievement or productivity in life.

Dr. Grandin has become a prominent author and speaker on the subject of autism because "I have read enough to know that there are still many parents, and, yes, professionals, too, who believe that 'once autistic, always autistic.' This dictum has meant sad and sorry lives for many children diagnosed, as I was in early life, as autistic. To these people, it is incomprehensible that the characteristics of autism can be modified and controlled. However, I feel strongly that I am living proof that they can." (Taken from Emergence: Labeled Autistic)

Even though she was considered "weird" in her young school years, she eventually found a mentor, who recognized her interests and abilities, which she later expanded into becoming a successful livestock handling equipment designer, one of very few in the world. She has designed the facilities in which half the cattle are handled in the United States, consulting for firms such as Burger King, McDonald's, Swift and others.

She presently works as an Associate Professor at Colorado State University but also speaks around the world on both autism and cattle handling."

For more information about Dr. Grandin: http://www.templegrandin.com/