May 16th, 2008
Autism and Faith: A Journey into Community is a new resource for clergy, religious educators, and families of autistic children to develop “inclusive spiritual supports” for autistic individuals in religious settings. The 52-page guide was developed by the Autism and Faith Task Force of COSAC, New Jersey’s main autism organization, and the Elizabeth M. […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 3 comments
April 28th, 2008
I was interviewed in the May issue of Working Mother magazine in an article by Jennifer Owens entitled The Quiet Struggle: From heartbreak to hope: moms of kids with special needs. The mothers in the article have special needs kids of varying diagnoses (some with autism) and ages (3 years old; adults). One mother […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 24 comments
April 21st, 2008
In an op-ed entitled Foul Shots in yesterday’s New York Post, Robert Goldberg charts what could be called the rise and fall of the MMR vaccine. The MMR was developed by microbiologist Maurice Hilleman, “saved millions of lives around the world,” and—in one press conference in 1998—was said to be linked to digestive problems in […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 53 comments
April 10th, 2008
Tonight, Thursday, April 10th, I’m honored to be part of a Lit Café featuring writers on the autism spectrum:
Amy Gravino, student and author of the forthcoming The Naughty Autie: Not Your (Neuro)typical Dating Guide!, a book about dating and sexuality for adults and young adults on the autism spectrum
Jason Ross, Adaptations member, poet, and […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 8 comments
April 6th, 2008
“…….happy endings are possible, even if they’re not quite the endings originally envisaged.”
So an article in today’s Telegraph about love and Asperger’s syndrome describes the relationship between Sarah Hendrickx and Keith Newton. The couple met through internet dating:
……the first stage of their relationship was fiery and fraught. To Sarah, Keith was ‘a puzzle’. He’d […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 2 comments
March 29th, 2008
Roaming in the bookstore in a nearby university town, I lingered over the tables of new non-fiction and poetry; the neat stacks of new literary criticism, linguistics, and social science (and found one called Echolalias which was a highly, highly theoretical study of a very, very real phenomenon in our life); the sale books. I […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 21 comments
March 25th, 2008
It’s taken some years, a lot of flashcards, and a lot of pointing to words in books, train station signs, STOP signs, cartons of McDonald’s fries (although those golden arches look less and less like an M somtimes and more like four mega-large fries; guess I’ve passed too many orders into the back seat): Charlie […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 6 comments
March 3rd, 2008
Embracing Autism: Connecting and Communicating with Children in the Autism Spectrum is a new book edited by Robert Parish, whose autistic son Jack is now a teenager. Parish has also made a number of DVDs about autism including Come Back Jack and ASD 101; he is one of many parents of autistic children whom I […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 9 comments
February 18th, 2008
Autism alters lives, but parents feel “blessed”, reports an article about a family in McAllen, Texas. Patrick and Sylvia Hamilton’s son Michael is 23. While they worry—as many, and perhaps all, of us do—about resources and opportunities as children get older, the Hamiltons have no regrets.
“Special children are born into special families,” Sylvia said. “We’re […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 9 comments
January 26th, 2008
“Four minutes of fame” came to teenager Jason McElwain when he scored 20 points in the final four minutes of a Greece Athena High School basketball game. That was almost two years ago—-a book by “J-Mac” and Daniel Paiser is out, The Game of My Life: a True Story of Struggle, Triumph and Growing […]
By Kristina Chew, PhD -- 9 comments
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