Temple Grandin: Autism & Animals (2023)

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  • Опубликовано: 31 окт 2024
  • World-renowned scientist, academic, and animal behaviorist, Dr. Temple Grandin, spoke about the link between the autistic brain and animal behavior to help homesteaders better take care of their animals. This talk was filmed live at the 2023 Homestead Festival. (Day 1 / Main Stage)
    With every ticket purchase for the 2024 Homestead Festival, you'll get access to watch all the speakers and talks in all the different tents as soon as they come available. Get your tickets today at thehomesteadfe...
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    About Temple Grandin:
    Dr. Grandin did not talk until she was three and a half years old. She was fortunate to get early speech therapy. Her teachers also taught her how to wait and take turns when playing board games. She was mainstreamed into a normal kindergarten at age five. Oliver Sacks wrote in the forward of Thinking in Pictures that her first book Emergence: Labeled Autistic was “unprecedented because there had never before been an inside narrative of autism.” Dr. Sacks profiled Dr. Grandin in his best selling book Anthropologist on Mars.
    Dr. Grandin became a prominent author and speaker on both autism and animal behavior. Today she is a professor of Animal Science at Colorado State University. She also has a successful career consulting on both livestock handling equipment design and animal welfare. She has been featured on NPR (National Public Radio) and a BBC Special - "The Woman Who Thinks Like a Cow". She has also appeared on National TV shows such as Larry King Live, 20/20, Sixty Minutes, Fox and Friends, and she has a 2010 TED talk. Articles about Dr. Grandin have appeared in Time Magazine, New York Times, Discover Magazine, Forbes and USA Today. HBO made an Emmy Award winning movie about her life and she was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2016. Learn more at www.templegran...

Комментарии • 21

  • @jhosk
    @jhosk 7 дней назад +2

    Wonderful lady

  • @Sept2cfm1953
    @Sept2cfm1953 23 дня назад +10

    My grandson wasn't talking, so I went out and got him the biggest red ball and kept saying, ball. I then took him to a car dealership that had the biggest the biggest American flag. Then I took him to the pond where many were walking their dogs, and I kept saying, doggy, so many shapes and sizes.
    He loved the ball and began to say ball, we were in the grocery store, and he said flag, and then we came across a cat, and he said doggy. I had to correct him and say, no kitty.
    Don't leave it up to others to teach the children that surround your life. Be active.

  • @HoneyHollowHomestead
    @HoneyHollowHomestead 5 месяцев назад +19

    This is an awesome presentation! I am in my 60's, before my father passed away he told me the best thing he ever did was take an apprenticeship with a machinist. That is something we don't have anymore, apprenticeships. I would LOVE to see apprenticeships brought back and less push on going to college.

  • @marlo2606
    @marlo2606 5 месяцев назад +15

    I'm in the adoption process for a autistic child 16 yo. He is so amazing and loves animals. I have 10 dogs one cat. I'm 50 years old and Divorced. I am so happy to welcome such a gifted child in my life. I get a lifetime blessing and have every desire to help him navigate the world. We can do it together. I want to expose him to every possibility and experience.You have to be able to see the possibilities in these children and their gifts. So many beautiful gifts. ❤️

  • @slarkey4594
    @slarkey4594 22 дня назад +4

    I believe I am undiagnosed autistic at 47. I am a horse trainer and I’ve always had a remarkable ability with them understanding and their communication. I was put in speech therapy when I was enrolled in school and I can’t do math, or remember many dates (birthdays etc) I think temple is a perfect representative of many of us. She was able to do something bigger with it because she was actually diagnosed and back then we were called retards and socially cast to the corners of the room and told to shut up. But she wasn’t made to shut up. She is an inspiration to me and others like me. I have crippling unreasonable anxiety socially but am incredibly cool in life and death situations. So many things tell me the neglect and undiagnosed situation I lived really hurt me more than i previously thought. I used to think the fact they missing my diagnoses helped me but I think It ended up really having hindered my ability to do bigger things.

  • @christopherstube9473
    @christopherstube9473 17 дней назад +1

    Amazing lecture, amazing woman.

  • @thomasdulaney1054
    @thomasdulaney1054 Месяц назад +2

    Temple Grandin walked so I could run in the workplace.

  • @HeliNoir
    @HeliNoir 9 дней назад +1

    Me being AuDHD I found out people didn't think how I thought when I was in my early twenties. I felt alienated even though I was with friends always masking thinking what's wrong with me because I could never be in the same wavelength as them and them with me. I'm just thankful that when I was a kid growing up, I got exposed to doing a lot of handiwork outside - both at hoem and my little school. It's really funny though when she said Accountants and Artists because I'm both. That's what having ADHD and being autistic is like - a constant war within you.

  • @lesliemeeks2895
    @lesliemeeks2895 Месяц назад +3

    Fantastic presentation!!
    Thank you for clarifying the differences of perceptions of our world between humans & animals and our vastly different reactions to our interactions in our world!
    Also the differences in perceptions between human beings!
    The lack of empathy towards our animals is still a huge issue in the world.
    Thank you so much for shining a light on this subject.
    You're an awesome person!! 😊

  • @dlewis895
    @dlewis895 9 дней назад +1

    WE NEED MORE TECH SCHOOLS. OR. APPRENTICE SCHOOLS. YES. PHONICS WORKS Different THINGS ACTIVITIES. SEW COOK SHOP ETC ART. WORK BRAVOOO

  • @ADHDGG
    @ADHDGG 22 дня назад +1

    In Mexico City the dogs are running around without leashes and they are very sweet. Sadly, in the U.S., we are so sue happy that it has us putting our animals on leashes

  • @garfielddexter6224
    @garfielddexter6224 4 месяца назад +3

    Thank you 👍

  • @wethreebees
    @wethreebees 2 месяца назад +1

  • @maricarmen8776
    @maricarmen8776 4 месяца назад +5

    I have tried to help my child but can’t find more things it’s not easy. As a single parent with not support emotionally and economically it’s not easy. You have to pay for everything and not everybody taken things with professionalism and with discipline. Governmental hep is not really good and not serious. Counselors act as if they care but they don’t.

    • @mortyblink8355
      @mortyblink8355 2 месяца назад

      God bless you. Don ' t give up !!

    • @wethreebees
      @wethreebees Месяц назад +1

      Praying for you.❤

    • @virginiawilkinson5038
      @virginiawilkinson5038 25 дней назад +1

      Don't give up, start a group of other moms. You have to get some knowledge too.

  • @dadvastator967
    @dadvastator967 23 дня назад +1

    Think of a smell. When i do this i picture a part of my brain (or flying particles like in Willy Wonka) conjuring the smell recall. Once the smell is in my stm, i get physical reactions to the visual smells in mah head. Idk what im on about, make it a smelly day!!

  • @dlewis895
    @dlewis895 9 дней назад +2

    TRUMP. COULD GET HELP. WITH. GRANDIN

  • @dlewis895
    @dlewis895 9 дней назад +1

    GET KIDS OUT DOING DUFFERENT. ACTIVITIES. TAKE TURNS. BE ON TIME GIVE LIMITED CHOICES. BC. SOME ARE SHY SOME ARE. MORE AGGRESSIVE PERSONALITY

  • @dlewis895
    @dlewis895 9 дней назад +1

    PILOTS. CHECK LIST ONE STEP AT A TIME NOT A LONG LIST OF THINGS TO DO CANT REMEMBER TWO DIFFERENT TYPES OF BITS FOR HORSES. ONE IS MUCH MORE COMFORTABLE