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Learning
with a Visual Brain in an Auditory World: Visual Language Strategies for
Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders
by Ellyn Lucas Arwood, Ed.D. and Carole Kaulitz, M.Ed.
  $29.95
2007, ISBN 978-1-931282-38-3
Children
diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) often present parents
and educators with perplexing symptoms. Even though the skills of children
with ASD can range from very high to very low, they have similar underlying
learning systems. Knowledge about these learning systems helps provide
direction for choosing effective assessment and intervention methods for
helping individuals with ASD learn to behave, to perform academically,
and to become socially competent.
This
book is unique in that the authors are recommending strategies based on
the language of the way individuals with ASD learn. Even though many scholars
recognize that individuals with ASD use "visual" ways of thinking,
most fail to realize that a visual mental language is different from the
visual sensory system of seeing something.
The book
is divided into three sections. Section One (Chapters 1-5) is about the
learning system. Section Two (Chapters 6-9) connects the learning of a
child with ASD to how the child performs behaviorally, academically, and
socially. Finally, Section Three (Chapters 10-15) provides intervention
strategies for helping a person (child or adult) with the visual brain
characteristic of ASD to fit into an auditory culture.The strategies are
language-based and take into consideration the complexity of the underlying
biological learning system.
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