Zoom Autism Magazine Issue 9 | Page 34

Q&A “ If you could let a teacher (past or future) know just one thing about yourself (if you are autistic) or your autistic child (if you are the parent), what would it be? ” “Dear teachers, past, present, and future: You underestimate me. Because my body does not obey my mind. Because I can’t speak in a way that demonstrates my understanding. Because I can’t sit still or look at you and pay attention. Because my body language is a completely foreign language to you, you mistakenly believe it is expressing disinterest, stubbornness, defiance, lack of engagement, and inability to learn. Don’t underestimate me. You can learn as much from me as I am learning from you. And I AM learning.” ~ Michelle Jones “I wish someone had noticed and empowered my different mind instead of writing me off as stupid, difficult, unmanageable, or attentionseeking. I wish someone had taken the time to read between the lines and figure out what my verbal scripts meant. I wish someone had advocated for me instead of everyone being against me. And above all, I wish I knew what autistic was so that I knew I was more than just stupid, difficult, etc.” ~ Em Martha Feightner Heil “This is a deep one for me, so my reply will be broken up into two: Dear teachers of elementary school past: I needed you to be my social advocates through the bullying, crying fits, and low grades. What? You’re finding this out now? Well, I couldn’t voice it back then because I didn’t know I was autistic back then. Just that I was different. While most of you did do a good job with helping out with grades, academics don’t mean a thing on the playground, where I needed you most. You can’t say you didn’t know because you had access to an IEP. You can’t say you didn’t know because you labelled most of that behavior as problematic. If only I could go back and show you what I’ve become now, but alas, there is a reason they call it the past ... Dear teachers of the future: Let me tell you something you’re probably not going to hear in any of your teachers’ college courses: ‘A child 34 ZOOM Autism through Many Lenses isn’t an IEP, and an IEP isn’t a child.’ Don’t let bullet points on an IEP dictate what a child can and cannot do because at the end of the day, autistic children are human and can live up to their potential like any other child.” ~ Theo Howe “Just because I’m not making eye contact doesn’t mean I’m not listening. Getting in my face and/or yelling at me doesn’t get my attention or respect. In fact, my behavior will probably escalate, which doesn’t benefit anyone!” ~ Sarah Bradley Morris “Don’t mold me in your image. Just because I disagree with you doesn’t mean I’ll kill you in your sleep. How can anyone learn if we’re all parroting your opinions? Saying “this is wrong, fix it” does nothing to help me understand the assignment. Try teaching me the concept first. If I still don’t get it, try another tactic rather than doubling down and using the method that didn’t work the last five times. Your double standards appall me. The boy who talks about groping is funny, but my off-color humor is shocking? Your favorites can do no wrong, but I’m a bad person for wanting disability accommodations? No one is fooled at your feigning to like me.” ~ Emma “ She knows a lot more than she will express to you.” ~ Patty Zayas “I wish any of my teachers would have noticed that I’m autistic and got me the help I needed as a kid. I’m about to have a career as a teacher starting this fall. I hope that my autistic students feel safe in my class. I hope their parents and other school staff don’t force me to try to make them act neurotypical.” ~Karin Gomez “Sigh. Social skills. They need to be taught. By the time I ‘mastered’ (right!) peer-level concepts, ZOOM Autism through Many Lenses 35