Jump to content
RemedySpot.com

Re: Adult Service ?

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

said:

" If someone wants to help the adults and provide services? What

> services and areas of help is needed in the adult field? "

If someone wants to help the adults and provide services? What

services and areas of help is needed in the adult field?

I think part of it is something that will replace school services…

something to DO. Most people, when they graduate from high school,

either go to college or get a job. Our adults usually do neither. So

we need some sort of service to fill the gap. Something supportive

that either provides support for some sort of post-secondary

education (vocational school or program, independent living skill

program, etc.) OR they need to get a job. Unfortunately, most of our

individuals don't have the skills for that, either, because they were

not taught those skills in school because Texas does a LOUSY job

overall on transition and transition planning (they get cited on this

by the Feds at every monitoring visit!)

DARS (formerly TRC) will only provide job coaching, etc. for a very

limited amount of time (about 6 weeks is what I hear). Therefore, if

the individual with autism hasn't mastered his job in 6 weeks, they

are out of luck. There is no continuous job coaching available.

I have found TRANSPORTATION to be a significant issue, depending on

where you live. If you have a child who will not be learning to

drive, even if they want to or are able to pursue post secondary

education or get a job, they have to be able to access transportation

to get there. Even though I live in a metro area, there is NO public

transportation here. So, if I work, then my daughter can't go to

school or to work because she has no way to get there.

Appropriate recreational opportunities is another area of concern.

It's not like most of our family members are going to go out to a bar

and meet friends after work. Most of them don't have any friends

because they have no social skills. So teaching and learning social

skills (as well as behavior management) continue to be an issue all

throughout their lives…yet it doesn't get addressed, either.

Then there are independent living skills. I want my children to learn

to do things for themselves. At 18, I still struggle with getting my

daughter to do even the most simple chores at home. If she can't do

these, then how can she possibly live on her own or be self-

sufficient? These weren't taught at school (even though they were in

her IEP repeatedly), so she still needs to learn them. But she won't

work with me very well…I really need someone besides me to work with

her. But there aren't very many places that will teach these skills.

If you can find a habilitator who understands and knows how to work

with autism, you are really lucky. My experience with CLASS is that

they have no one trained to do anything with or for people with

autism. You have to find your own people and train them yourself.

Other issues include hygiene, medication management (knowing why one

takes medicine, what it is for, when to take it, how to refill it,

etc.), handling medical care issues (if parents are not guardians),

how to handle financial matters, etc. They still need to learn all

these skills OR if they have learned them, they need an environment

to practice them in. Otherwise, its all up to the parents when high

school ends.

Those are just a few of the things adults with autism need. Pretty

much all the same things that they have always needed…but there is no

longer " school " to send them to in an attempt to get someone to teach

them these things.

Sorry this was so lengthy!

nna

Link to comment
Share on other sites

said: " nna--you should post the link

> to your on-line autism 101 again so that parents can ask that the

people in > the agencies they're dealing with to ask least have THAT

training. "

-

That link is http://www.mhatc.org/education.htm The course even comes

with CEU's for professionals who need them...an extra incentive to take

the course. It is just a pretty basic autism 101 course, but it is a

start. It is very difficult to work with people you know nothing about

and do an even mediocre job!

nna

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've been doing community service work with my son. He LOVES it. We go

once a week to a place that feeds the homeless and has a food pantry and a

clothing distribution center. We make sandwhiches, hand out lunches, and

hang out with the other volunteers. He knows he's being useful and helping

others, and there's LOTS of teachable moments for self management, hygiene,

social skills, skill acquisition etc. AND we're doing a useful service for

the community. I don't see why this couldn't be a possibility for adult

programs. Some kind of overlap with food pantries or other volunteer

efforts.

Just a thought.

Re: Adult Service ?

said:

" If someone wants to help the adults and provide services? What

> services and areas of help is needed in the adult field? "

If someone wants to help the adults and provide services? What

services and areas of help is needed in the adult field?

I think part of it is something that will replace school services…

something to DO. Most people, when they graduate from high school,

either go to college or get a job. Our adults usually do neither. So

we need some sort of service to fill the gap. Something supportive

that either provides support for some sort of post-secondary

education (vocational school or program, independent living skill

program, etc.) OR they need to get a job. Unfortunately, most of our

individuals don't have the skills for that, either, because they were

not taught those skills in school because Texas does a LOUSY job

overall on transition and transition planning (they get cited on this

by the Feds at every monitoring visit!)

DARS (formerly TRC) will only provide job coaching, etc. for a very

limited amount of time (about 6 weeks is what I hear). Therefore, if

the individual with autism hasn't mastered his job in 6 weeks, they

are out of luck. There is no continuous job coaching available.

I have found TRANSPORTATION to be a significant issue, depending on

where you live. If you have a child who will not be learning to

drive, even if they want to or are able to pursue post secondary

education or get a job, they have to be able to access transportation

to get there. Even though I live in a metro area, there is NO public

transportation here. So, if I work, then my daughter can't go to

school or to work because she has no way to get there.

Appropriate recreational opportunities is another area of concern.

It's not like most of our family members are going to go out to a bar

and meet friends after work. Most of them don't have any friends

because they have no social skills. So teaching and learning social

skills (as well as behavior management) continue to be an issue all

throughout their lives…yet it doesn't get addressed, either.

Then there are independent living skills. I want my children to learn

to do things for themselves. At 18, I still struggle with getting my

daughter to do even the most simple chores at home. If she can't do

these, then how can she possibly live on her own or be self-

sufficient? These weren't taught at school (even though they were in

her IEP repeatedly), so she still needs to learn them. But she won't

work with me very well…I really need someone besides me to work with

her. But there aren't very many places that will teach these skills.

If you can find a habilitator who understands and knows how to work

with autism, you are really lucky. My experience with CLASS is that

they have no one trained to do anything with or for people with

autism. You have to find your own people and train them yourself.

Other issues include hygiene, medication management (knowing why one

takes medicine, what it is for, when to take it, how to refill it,

etc.), handling medical care issues (if parents are not guardians),

how to handle financial matters, etc. They still need to learn all

these skills OR if they have learned them, they need an environment

to practice them in. Otherwise, its all up to the parents when high

school ends.

Those are just a few of the things adults with autism need. Pretty

much all the same things that they have always needed…but there is no

longer " school " to send them to in an attempt to get someone to teach

them these things.

Sorry this was so lengthy!

nna

Texas Autism Advocacy

www.TexasAutismAdvocacy.org

Texas Disability Network

Calendar of Events

www.TexasAutismAdvocacy.org

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...