Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

reminder -- TONIGHT 8pm -- Autism is a World on CNN

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

http://www.cnn.com/CNN/Programs/presents/index.autism.world.html

Sunday, May 22

Autism Is A World   8 p.m., 11 p.m.

 

Saturday, May 28

Autism Is A World   3 p.m., 8 p.m., 11 p.m.

Autism is a World: Synopsis

She is her own worst nightmare. When you meet Sue, she does not make eye contact. She does not offer to shake your hand. She may fixate on the buttons of your shirt, but cannot say your name. Sue Rubin has autism, a complicated disorder that causes her to act in many strange ways. For researchers, doctors, and psychologists, autism is mysterious and complex, its causes and cures still unknown. But this is not a film about experts or theories. In Autism is a World, Sue takes the audience on an extraordinary journey inside autism to explain what she feels and does. How she relates to others. Why she clutches spoons or finds comfort in falling water. What it has been like to go to college and run her own life. This is a view of autism as it has rarely been seen--from the inside out.

As a child, Sue did not give her parents much hope. She hit herself. Pulled hair. Bit her own arms and hands. She could not speak. Her mother Rita and her father Bob say they did everything to try to help. At age four, they took Sue to UCLA to explore the possibility that she might have autistic tendencies. The answer was clear and quick: forget ³tendencies,² Sue is severely autistic. As Sue interviews eminent Harvard researcher Margaret Bauman, we learn it is a disorder still barely understood.

Until she was 13, most believed Sue to be retarded. Repeated tests put her IQ at 29‹³the level of a 2 year old.² Rita says that her hopes for Sue, then, were modest‹to keep her out of an institution, to educate her in special classes, to someday help her get a job ³cleaning tables off or something like that that retarded people do.² But then, just before she was 13, Sue¹s psychologist, Jackie, introduced her to ³facilitated communication.² Jackie and Rita worked with Sue tirelessly and, slowly; the person trapped inside her silent, strange behavior began to communicate and to emerge into the world an aware, intelligent young woman. When Sue was retested months later, the results were stunning‹a 133 IQ. Sue entered regular high school classes.

Today, Sue is a junior at Whittier College with a history major. We see her in class, hear how hard it is to control her behaviors during the lecture, and find that she loves learning. We watch as she painstakingly and independently types her words. And, we meet Aishling, a friend since high school, a fellow student and, for the last 7 years, part of Sue¹s complicated network of support staff who make her life possible.

Sue takes the audience through her daily life‹through fun excursions with staffer Danny to bet the horses at Santa Anita, trips to the store to shop for groceries, and struggles to do what, for most, would be mundane tasks like making a salad or tying her shoes. We learn that Sue clutches at plastic spoons because they bring her comfort. We see her play for long stretches at the sink in a trickling flow of water during which, she says, the autistic side of her brain takes over. It is a startling juxtaposition‹the clear, intelligent, articulate words of a woman who is behaving in the world in exceptionally strange ways.

Sue has become a tireless disability rights advocate. We watch her write a speech for a conference on autism. During the long process of writing, Sue¹s support staffer nne keeps her focused. Here, Sue demonstrates her wit, intelligence, and compassion. She starts by telling her audience, ³If you think living with autism is difficult, try getting into college² and ends, in a tender moment, with a very personal offer to help others with autism who hope to follow in her footsteps.

As the film moves to its conclusion, it comes to a wrenching emotional climax. After years, it is time for Aishling and nne to leave Sue¹s staff and pursue other interests. In meetings with psychologist Jackie, with her mother, with staff coordinator Janine and with Aishling and nne, it is clear that Sue is struggling and that the change is painful.

Sue shares her final thoughts as the film concludes. Her words are simple: ³The last thing I want to clarify is that no matter how much social interaction one has, one will never be free of autism. The tendencies to be and act in certain ways may subside but I will always be autistic.²

> CNN Presents Classroom Edition - Educator Guide

>

>

> Autism is a World

>

> Set your VCR to record the CNN Presents Classroom

> Edition: Autism is a World when it airs

> commercial-free on Monday, May 23, 2005 from 4:00--

> 5:00 a.m. ET on CNN.

>

> Program Overview

>

> For years, Sue Rubin says she was " her own worst

> nightmare. " Sue has autism, and until age 13, she was

> unable to communicate or control her unusual behavior.

> Now 26, Sue has become a disabled-rights advocate and

> a college student with a top IQ. In the Academy

> Award-nominated documentary Autism is a World,

> filmmaker Gerry Wurzburg and CNN Presents take a rare

> look at autism through the words of a young woman who

> lives with it.

>

> Grade Levels: 9-12, college

>

> Subject Areas: Health, Social Studies, Technology,

> Current Issues

>

> Objectives: The CNN Presents Classroom Edition: Autism

> is a World and its corresponding discussion questions

> and activities challenge students to:

>

> * Learn about the symptoms, characteristics and

> differentiated diagnoses associated with autism

> spectrum disorders (ASD);

> * Identify traits that are common to all autistic

> disorders;

> * Examine different treatment approaches for ASD;

> * Create an informational brochure about ASD for

> parents and local mental health providers.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...