Cultural and Testing Implications for Deaf and Autistic Children

(34 customer reviews)

$20.00 for 1 credit


MP3 Audio + Transcript
Add to Wishlist
Add to Wishlist

Description

Dr. Sharp was sitting in on an ADOS-2 a few months ago with a nonverbal little guy. The young boy used a fair amount of sign language, which got Dr. Sharp thinking: do the pragmatic communication problems associated with autism happen in nonverbal or deaf children? After a little Google searching, Dr. Sharp found Dr. Aaron Shield, a linguist out of Miami University, who has specialized in this very niche for much of his academic career. In this interview, they explore the fascinating intersection of deafness and autism. Here are a few topics that they touch on:

  • The neuroanatomical similarities and differences between sign and spoken language
  • The biggest myths associated with American Sign Language
  • Similarities and differences in language acquisition in deaf kids on the spectrum
  • Use of the ADOS-2 (and other common assessment tools) with deaf kids.

Note: Aaron did not mention this on the podcast, but he let me know after our interview that it is still clinically appropriate to use the ADI-R in assessing deaf kids with autism.

Target audience:  Psychologists, mental health counselors, marriage and family therapists, social workers, addiction counselors, nurses

There are no known conflicts of interest or commercial support to disclose.

Format: Asynchronous, distance learning. Non-interactive. Recorded audio with transcript.

Content Category: Clinical/Testing/Assessment/Culture Competence

This CE program is designated as beginner.

This interview was published in February of 2020.