Autism Society of America. Search the ASA web site for information on
Applied Behavior Analysis, the diagnostic criteria for autism and other
Pervasive Developmental Disorders, and news. To find a chapter in your
area and receive information in the mail, call 1-800-3AUTISM. (Click on this
link
to see a chapter list). ASA chapters are a good place to meet other
parents in your community.
To find an autism organization outside the U.S., go to the
National Autistic Society.
Need help with education or therapy funding, insurance,
respite care or other services? Find your state's Developmental Disabilities Agency on this
STATE LIST and call to see if you
qualify for assistance.
Looking for tutors, advocacy
groups, special education lawyers or psychologists in your state? Visit
www.yellowpagesforkids.com.
You should check the credentials of anyone you hire.
Families for Early Autism
Treatment, a non-profit organization based in California, provides
education, advocacy and support through chapters in various states. Provides
email newsletters and messages groups that are useful regardless of where
you live.
Sibshops
programs offer support and events for siblings of children with
disabilities.
The
Daniel Jordan Fiddle Foundation awards grants to residential,
recreational, vocational, educational and family programs that benefit
adolescents and adults with autism.
IAN, the Interactive Autism
Network, is an online project linking researchers and families. Parents
can fill out online questionnaires and read preliminary research data.
IAN is supported by Kennedy Krieger
Institute and Autism Speaks.
Autism Speaks, which merged with
the National Alliance for Autism Research and
Cure Autism
Now (CAN), is a
nonprofit organization dedicated to finding the causes, prevention,
treatment and cure of autism spectrum disorders. It has committed millions
of dollars to research. Programs include the Autism Genetic Resource
Exchange, Autism Treatment Network, Clinical Trials Network and
Innovative Technology for Autism. It's the largest
non-government agency funding autism research.
Autism Research
Institute, established in 1967, researches the causes, prevention,
diagnosis and treatment of autism spectrum disorders. This site contains
information on Secretin, vitamin therapy, dietary intervention, chelation
and experimental treatments and theories.
Do2Learn
has free resources, such as 300 picture cards that can be printed,
math grids, coloring pages, art projects, and images to help with the
tracing of shapes and letters. For teachers and parents of children
with autism and other learning disabilities.
IEPs, ARDs, IFSPs, what does it all mean?
Here are several web sites that help acquaint parents with the federal laws
requiring that children with a disability receive a free and appropriate
public education from birth to age 21. Find out what your rights are, and what to
do if you believe your school district is violating those rights.
NCLB and IDEA: What Parents of Students with Disabilities Need to Know and
Do: This printable guide explains two important U.S. laws, The No Child Left
Behind Act (NCLB) and the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. From
the National Center for Educational Outcomes with Council of State School
Officers and National Association of State Directors of Special Education.
Wrightslaw
- Hundreds of articles, cases and other information on special education law
and advocacy in a free online library and newsletter. This top-ranked legal site is run by
attorney Peter Wright and psychotherapist Pamela Wright, authors of easy-to-read,
self-help
books
for parents on law and advocacy.
Council for
Parent Attorneys and Advocates, a nonprofit group of parents, lawyers
and educational advocates, works to improve the education of children with
disabilities. Search for an education attorney in your state.
IDEA
Practices: A resource on the Individuals with Disabilities
Education Act (IDEA) regulations, news, litigation and funding.
Families and
Advocates Partnership for Education - a project funded by the U.S.
Department of Education to help parents and advocates improve the
"educational outcomes" for children with disabilities. Information available
in Spanish and other languages.
Defeat Autism Now!
A list of health care providers who have attended a DAN conference,
sponsored by the Autism Research Institute, about alternative biomedical
therapies for autism. Such therapies include dietary and nutritional
intervention (see our Diet
page for information on a diet free of gluten and milk) and chelation, which
is the removal of heavy metals such as lead and mercury from the body.
Autism One Radio: Web radio
that features programs on biomedical treatments plus interviews with
health care providers and parents.
Medline Plus: Autism information from the National Library of Medicine
and NIH.
Autism Network
Resources for Physicians aims to help doctors in their efforts to
understand autism and study the treatment options available, so that the
most beneficial treatments are accepted and recommended by medical
providers.
Project Lifesaver provides
wristwatch-like tracking devices that can help police who participate in
this program to find someone who
wanders away.
Select Autism
Merchandise sells packs that include Medic Alert jewelry, ID card,
window decal and cling, car magnet, two temporary tattoos, two autism
awareness cards, and safety guide.
Safety Turtle sells devices
that it claims will keep children safer near pools and waterways.