September 25 2015

Open Society
Corporal Thinking
Recent research suggests that the body is the brain. The part between our ears is not in charge.
Nonconscious Acquisition of Information
Chronic Pain and Treatment Decisions
Pride of Dripping Springs | ❤️🌈 | Instagram
24 likes, 0 comments - prideofdripping on August 1, 2024: "❤️🌈".
The Great Shoplifting Freak-Out
Why is it so hard to figure out if America’s enormous surge in theft is real?
Retailers Locked Up Their Products—and Broke Shopping in America
CVS, Target and other chains have barricaded everything from toiletries to cleaning supplies. It’s backfired in almost every way.
Local Intellectual and Developmental Disability Authorities | Resources
Cultural Autism Studies at Yale
Welcome to CASY! Join us to explore, define, generate, record and preserve autistic culture. The CASY program (originally Community Autism Socials) was started in 2014 by Dr Roger Jou of the Yale…
Because autistic culture is a unique phenomenon, it is constantly in the process of exploring itself, defining itself, and generating itself. Unlike holistic (non-autistic) culture, it is deeply relational. For many autistic people there is no strict boundary between self and environment, or self and other. We tend not to see things in hierarchies, but in relational ways that are in constant flux. “Neuro-Holographic” is an emergent idea that our group has embraced. Neuro-Holographic, as a concept here, refers to the idea that every small bit of energy and information, whether an atom or the universe, reflects every other part of itself in a seamless and meaningful way.
This has led to the awareness that, despite common misconceptions, we are very much empathetically connected to the things around us. Because our sensing mechanisms are super sensitive and often synesthetic (cross-sensing — for example, tasting colors or seeing sound) we often feel a part of the things around us. We don’t tend to see in hierarchies, but rather in “holograms,” as described. Always looking for connecting patterns in an overwhelming ocean of sensory, emotional, and energetic information, our relational culture focuses on how things go together and function. Because of these innate talents, insights, and a tendency toward invention, out of the box thinking, and an enthusiasm for combining patterns, autistic/Neuro-Holographic people have been responsible for many important developments in the larger cultures in which they find themselves. Being extraordinarily sensitive and seeing things in new ways is foundational to autistic culture.
MESHELL NDEGEOCELLO "NO MORE WATER: THE GOSPEL OF JAMES BALDWIN" - Blue Note Records
By Shannon J. Effinger The prescience of James Baldwin is alive nearly forty years after his passing, a testament to his enduring impact. A prolific writer, his essays, novels, plays, and poetry have assessed and often reproached the human condition. As an activist, his oratory prowess in the 1960s was bar none, lending his outspoken […]
“Raise The Roof” features Chin sans accompaniment as the intensity of her words captures the stark and harrowing reality of the pervasive racism we cannot seem to escape: “It must be in the fucking water being force-fed to the police, the prosecutor and the politicians who care nothing for Black bodies falling like leaves in late August…in Ferguson…in Cleveland…in Staten Island, only minutes away from where my own child sits, watching The Muppets take over Manhattan.”
Raise The Roof
Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupRaise The Roof · Meshell NdegeocelloTravel℗ Blue Note Records; ℗ 2024 Meshell Ndegeocello, under exclusive licens...
Also criticises Astrea’s policy of having students follow along with a ruler for guided reading time, as “damaging and simply boring to all confident readers”. (Rules for this are set out in this series of instructions, which have tweeted about before.)
— Warwick Mansell (@warwickmansell)
James Baldwin on the Creative Process and the Artist’s Responsibility to Society
“A society must assume that it is stable, but the artist must know, and he must let us know, that there is nothing stable under heaven.”
James Baldwin on the Artist’s Struggle for Integrity and How It Illuminates the Universal Experience of What It Means to Be Human
“The poets (by which I mean all artists) are finally the only people who know the truth about us. Soldiers don’t. Statesmen don’t. Priests don’t. Union leaders don’t. Only poets.”…
[This is] a time … when something awful is happening to a civilization, when it ceases to produce poets, and, what is even more crucial, when it ceases in any way whatever to believe in the report that only the poets can make. Conrad told us a long time ago…: “Woe to that man who does not put his trust in life.” Henry James said, “Live, live all you can. It’s a mistake not to.” And Shakespeare said — and this is what I take to be the truth about everybody’s life all of the time — “Out of this nettle, danger, we pluck this flower, safety.” Art is here to prove, and to help one bear, the fact that all safety is an illusion. In this sense, all artists are divorced from and even necessarily opposed to any system whatever.
An El Paso middle school bans all-black clothing, citing mental health concerns
An El Paso middle school is banning students from wearing all-black clothing due to it being associated with mental health issues.
Shitposting as public pedagogy
In response to the growing ubiquity of social media, critical media literacy scholars have increasingly called for the examination of online practices and their embedded pedagogies and curricula. I...
The Gender Drama in Boxing: Insights into the Olympic Controversy — Rebecca Minor | Gender Specialist
Explore the Olympic boxing gender controversy involving Imane Khelif and Lin Yu-ting. Understand the complexities of gender testing, disinformation, and the need for inclusive sports.
Los Angeles gave families $1,000 a month in the biggest basic income pilot in the country. Now the results are in.
A basic income pilot in Los Angeles saw increases in the quality of life for participants and their families. Some even left abusive situations.
Putting a negative spin on it: Using a fidget spinner can impair memory for a video lecture
Fidget spinners have experienced a rapid rise in popularity, at least partially because they are marketed as attentional aides with the potential to enhance student learning. In the current study, co...
What makes a good teacher? Comparing the perspectives of students on the autism spectrum and staff
Involving students on the autism spectrum in decision-making about their education is good practice for inclusion and mandated by the Special Educational Needs and Disability Code of Practice in En...
Identifying the functions of restricted and repetitive behaviours and interests in Autism: A scoping review.
Restricted and repetitive behaviours and interests (RRBIs) are common and integral to the everyday living of autistic persons. While RRBIs are often s…
Fidgeting as self-evidencing: A predictive processing account of non-goal-directed action
Non-goal-directed actions have been relatively neglected in cognitive science, but are ubiquitous and related to important cognitive functions. Fidget…
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Predictive processing shows how seemingly pointless actions like fidgeting in fact can serve an uncertainty-reducing function.
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To resolve mounting uncertainty about the world, agents perform simple and precise actions, confirming their self-model.
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This proposal is extended to autistic stimming, which can be understood as a form of fidgeting.
#20, Make Peace With Fidgeting
Two types of spaces have been provided to pacify fidgeting. A place to play and release energy, and a calmer area with shag carpeting that encourages focus and listening. The two zones are separate…
What about the other kids in the room? — Unconditional Learning
Your student is breaking stuff. Not idly breaking stuff, like accidentally snapping a pencil or shredding a piece of paper with fidgeting hands. I mean tearing apart your carefully composed bulletin board, knocking your framed poster to the floor and shattering the glass, red-in-the-face and not res
Monthly Newsletter August Edition
Counselling - Neurodiversity - Information - Signposting
Stimpunks
Autism Alliance of Canada Publishes Findings of an Autistic-led Survey Exploring the Needs of Autistic Adults - Autism Alliance of Canada
Autism Alliance of Canada is proud to share findings from the first part of the Canadian Autistic Adult Needs Assessment Survey, an Autistic-led research project focused on understanding the real-life needs of Autistic adults in Canada.
Special Education: Education Needs School- and District-Level Data to Fully Assess Resources Available to Students with Disabilities
Many children with disabilities are entitled to special education services tailored to their needs. But it seems that many schools don't have the...
Pl gender affirming care
Republicans — just like dysfunctional HOAs — have been stealing from America’s future
The GOP’s 43-year tax-cuts-for-billionaires-while-we-ignore-the-needs-of-the-country grift has an analogy in condos and homes across America that might help voters understand how it works and how they’ve gotten away with it.Fully 84 percent of all homes and apartments built and sold in 2022 came wit...
Upgrading PPE for staff working on COVID-19 wards cut
The findings are reported by a team at the University of Cambridge and Cambridge University Hospitals (CUH) NHS Foundation Trust. The research has not yet been peer-reviewed, but is being released