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  1 Autism Breakthrough: The Groundbreaking Method That Has Helped Families All Over The World
Author: Kaufman, Raun Kahlil Biographee: Kaufman, Raun Kahlil
 
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Class: 616.8588
Age: Adult
Language: English
LC: RC553.A8
ISBN-13: 9781250041111
LCCN: 2013033776
Imprint: St. Martin's Press
Pub Date: 04/01/2014
Availability: Out of Print Confirmed
List: $25.99
  Hardcover
Physical Description: x, 353 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm H 8.47", W 5.76", D 1.2", 0.97 lbs.
LC Series:
Brodart Sources: Brodart's Insight Catalog: Adult
Bibliographies:
Awards:
Starred Reviews:
TIPS Subjects: Psychology/Self-Help
Disabilities
Biography, Individual
BISAC Subjects: FAMILY & RELATIONSHIPS / Autism Spectrum Disorders
PSYCHOLOGY / Developmental / Child
LC Subjects: Autism, Psychological aspects
Autistic people, Biography
Kaufman, Raun Kahlil, Mental health
PSYCHOLOGY / Developmental / Child
SEARS Subjects: Autism, Psychological aspects
Autistic people, Biography
Kaufman, Raun Kahlil, Mental health
Reading Programs:
 
Annotations
Publisher Annotations | 12/20/2013
As a boy, Raun K. Kaufman was diagnosed by multiple experts as severely autistic, with an IQ below 30, and destined to spend his life in an institution. Years later, Raun graduated with a degree in Biomedical Ethics from Brown University and has become a passionate and articulate spokesperson for the autism community with no trace of his former condition. Thanks to The Son-Rise Program, an incredible program his parents created, Raun experienced a full recovery from autism. In 'Autism Breakthrough,' Kaufman presents the ground-breaking principles behind the program that helped him, and thousands of other families with special children. Kaufman explains that autism is frequently misunderstood as a behavioral disorder when in fact it is a social relational disorder. He explains what it feels like to be autistic, and shows how and why The Son-Rise program, which focuses on the parent-child connection, works. And he offers clear, practical strategies for working with children that readers can apply immediately-in some cases, parents see a change in their children in as little as one day. 'Autism Breakthrough' makes available for the first time in book form the principles and practical applications of The Son-Rise program, presented by someone who not only teaches the program, but has experienced the joy of it in his own life.
Journal Reviews
Kirkus Reviews | 02/01/2014
The director of Global Education for the Autism Treatment Center of America chronicles how his parents pioneered a new treatment for autism after receiving a grim prognosis of his condition. In 1974, doctors informed Kaufman's parents that their 1-year-old son was so severely autistic that he ought to be institutionalized. He was unresponsive and transfixed by inanimate objects and repetitive activities. The parents rejected this advice and, fortunately for the author, decided to go it alone, relying instead on their own experiences as professional educators. Kaufman explains their approach. As they saw it, their primary task was to develop a relationship with their son. They spent hours sitting with him, imitating his behavior patterns, including hand flapping and rocking. Gradually, they built a foundation for communication, and their son began to respond. They created games to use as learning experiences, and in just five years, the author writes, he was on the road to full recovery and able to attend school. In 1976, his father, Barry Neil Kaufman (No Regrets: Last Chance for a Father and Son, 2003), wrote Son Rise, the first of his many self-help books. Then the Kaufmans opened the Autism Treatment Center to share their methods. (Their children, including the author, now run the center.) Avoiding the techniques of behavior modification, the methods promoted by the center help parents understand how repetitive behavior patterns give autistic children an illusion of control--autistic children deal with sensory overload by shutting out their environments. The center offers motivational tools and training for parents and caregivers on how to structure an emotionally safe environment in which children can experiment with new social skills. Kaufman includes links to training guides and three appendices. An innovative, alternative approach to creating a child-centered environment that directly empowers parents and caregivers. 352pg. KIRKUS MEDIA LLC, c2014.
Library Journal | 03/01/2014
Kaufman (director, Global Education for the Autism Treatment Ctr. of America) has a story to tell and it is a compelling one. Kaufman was diagnosed with autism at 18 months, but his parents defied experts, refused to institutionalize him, and developed an in-home therapy program that they called Son-Rise. Now grown and apparently recovered from autism, the author mingles his own story with the guidance he offers in this book. His voice is warm and fascinating, his experience is one that will bring confidence to families new to their diagnosis, or who may be struggling to find hope. But however heartfelt, this is very much a marketing book--Kaufman is selling the program developed by his parents to other parents, who may not have all the information about current therapy and best practice at hand. Touting anecdote, his own seemingly miraculous recovery, and disparaging other treatment protocols, Kaufman makes an emotionally persuasive case. However, the research cited has questionable relevance to Kaufman's own assertions, and there has been no reliable, independent, peer-reviewed study of the Son-Rise program. Empirically validated methodologies rooted in evidence-based practice, such as Naomi Chedd and Kevin Levine's Treatment Planning for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders: An Individualized, Problem-Solving Approach, are much more appropriate for most readers. VERDICT Pick up this book with a heavy dose of skepticism, read the irresistible story, and then do your own research. Victoria Frerichs, Prescot, UK. 352p. LIBRARY JOURNAL, c2014.
Publishers Weekly | 02/17/2014
Diagnosed as severely autistic, Kaufman was the first to benefit from the Son-Rise program for curing autistic children, developed by his parents, and here offers a practical and upbeat introduction for parents seeking to use the program's strategies. Now director of global education for the Autism Treatment Center of America, Kaufman explains how the Son-Rise program frames autism as a social-relational disorder, rather than a behavioral disorder, and recommends meeting the child where his own interests lie in order to build a personal bond. His methods for working through four milestones of socialization--nonverbal communication, verbal communication, interactive attention span, and flexibility--offer a helpful road map, with methodology further explained in online supplements to each chapter. He offers an academic paper about empirical research on the program as a nod to skeptical readers, but his chapter espousing nutritional approaches to autism throws him back into the fringe camp. The most appealing aspect of the author's approach is the limitless hope he offers to discouraged parents: "what your child has done (or not done) up until now tells you nothing about what he can do in the future." His personal faith in the program, his warmth, and the targeted application of principles will encourage readers to try his methods even if they are undecided about the supporting evidence. Agent: Stephanie Tade, Stephanie Tade Agency. (Apr.). 352p. PUBLISHERS WEEKLY, c2014.
9781250041111,dl.it[0].title