Guest guest Posted December 15, 2003 Report Share Posted December 15, 2003 > that he/she has autism?>>>>>>>>>>>>>. I would probably just wait until they ask about it as this is what I am doing with my son who is 8 yrs old. Marj Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 15, 2003 Report Share Posted December 15, 2003 When you say " developmentally 4 years old " what exactly do you mean ? cognitively ? emotionally ? I don't recall at exactly what age my son started asking for definitions (and I would wait until the child asks), but when he did around 8, I started by telling him that he has a somewhat different way of thinking that most of the time is what gives him his his wonderful original ideas and tremendous memory capability, and sometimes it causes him problems because either he can't understand others or others can't understand him.... I don't think you need to " break the news' to the child, rather, wait for an opportunity when issues of differences come up in a clam conversation and see if it is " going there " , then you can tlk about it. I hope it helps you a bit. it IS a tough question. I think in most cases teh child already knows in his bones taht he is different and he needs a calming explanation of how he is different , not why and not labels. (my own son ended up diagnosing himself, so to speak at, about age 9 - 9.5, in other words, when HE needed to knwo if it has a NAME he looked for it, and demanded ot go to an AS expert...he is now 11 and is at the stage of why do I need this AS? " lol) F -- ( ) breaking the news to the child Has anyone here had experience or know of successful models for telling a child (11 year old/4 years old developmentally) that he/she has autism? Best, Bill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 <<<<<<opportunity when issues of differences come up in a clam conversation >>>> should read CALM conversation.... sorry Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 Faherty wrote a book called " Aspergers, What Does it Mean to Me " For kids with HFA and AS. It is a workbook that is very comprehensive and allows kids to focus on what issues THEY have, no cookie cutter stuff here. I read it last week and my HFA seven year old will be doing it soon. All pronoun issues and confusing language were edited out by adults with autism. It was very enlightening for ME to read. It depends on what you mean by your child being developmentally 4. If she acts like a 4 year old socially, so does my child and I think htis book is fine. If she has not mentally progressed past four in thought processes, motor skills etc and you mean more of a cognitive thing, it probably would not be a good time to tell her as most 4 year olds are not developmentally ready for this kind of news. HTH You can order the book from the Autism Society of NC Bookstore. - > Has anyone here had experience or know of successful models for > telling a child (11 year old/4 years old developmentally) that he/she > has autism? > > Best, > > Bill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 16, 2003 Report Share Posted December 16, 2003 >>Being only 4 yo developmentally, I'm not sure that I would spend too much time on it. I would say it as I would talk about anything else - brown eyes or curly hair. We told our older ds he was autistic after we had watched a movie in which a child was more severely autistic. We then told him, " You have a form of autism just like that boy... " and went on to discuss how it affects people differently. Sometimes I still say to him, " Most people with autism... " as a way to introduce to him that what we are seeing is part of having autism. With my 7 yo, we don't really tell him he is autistic yet but he's never mentioned wanting to know either. I am in a local support group and I do tons of printing for our autism activities so it's a wonder he doesn't ask! << My almost-6yo son " looks " normal and speaks in a really articulate way, so I am frequently having to explain that he has autism to people who look confused or weirded out by any of his odd behaviors or speech. Recently he asked me what " having autism " means, and I explained very matter of factly that it means that he sees the world in a special way that sometimes other people don't understand. He seemed to be completely satisfied by the explanation and hasn't asked about it again. IMHO if the child asks, then he's ready to hear, but it's also important to not go into way more detail than the question required. Hope that helps! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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