I had serious questions about Patricia Howlin's realunderstanding of HFA/AS issues when I read her "Autism: Preparingfor Adulthood." Whatever doubts I had then have been resolved not in her favor with this most recent effort.
The book is written for training work with very young children. Parents using this material for any of our hyperlexic children over the age of four or five may be sadly disappointed with the results. The book appears written for and at a simplistic level of conversation that our bright older children simply may not tolerate. The cost of the book, no doubt, may have been in developing all of the artwork--the book is heavily line-drawing illustrated--with little thought to making it age-relevant to an older audience. In their first chapter, the authors suggest the book is for use for children from four to thirteen years old. I have my doubts about that. I'm no expert on these matters, but I can only guess this book should be so labeled: "For Children Five and Younger." The book's value lies in its repetitive presentation of different stages or levels of conceptual complexity. I do not take issue with what the authors say or do. I can only surmise that parents of older children would have to engage their own commercial artists to make the illustrations more age-appropriate, and also do a complete story-text re-write for the concepts to ring true with more mature children. Indeed, the authors suggest that is necessary. So why not place these thoughts on the cover and in the promotional material for the book?
This book may be fine for a four year old. Intolerable, I would think, to our older kids.
I was hoping to find enough material in the book for "transfer" to older child, adolescent, and young to mature adult communications and social skills training, using the model and the training map of the authors. I am sorry to report that I have neither the will nor the energy to do that, as the authors provide a reader looking to this older population with few handles to grasp.
Despite the good discussion of the concepts involved at the beginning of the book, the actual use of the book, as "A Practical Guide" appears limited to the age group I identify above.
What disappoints me most is that the book appears to be written as a compromise between those who think completely "in their heads" and those who are on the play-room floor. There doesn't appear to be a bright shining light urging all such experts to get out into the real world of older children, adolescents, young and older adults, and test their methods at those levels.
In contrast, I found the explanations and practical cognitive mapping exercises of two somewhat "history-bound" authors, Stephen Nowicki, Jr, and Marshal P. Duke, in their 1992 Peachtree Publishers book "Helping the Child Who Doesn't Fit In" to be of far greater consequence and practical assistance. Despite the fact that it was written before the "discovery" for all practical purposes of HFA/AS to the wider audience, their book rings true and presents a pragmatic road map to the semantic lingustic and semiotic language of social interaction sadly missing from the Howlin, B-C, Hadwin 1999 effort.
Hats off to the authors for their cognitive model and the approach of this book for pre-school children. Rainboots and umbrellas needed for those willing to slog it out in the trenches of more complex demands and real-life problems of older children.
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