Professionals workshop - Understanding Autism - Difference not Deficit
For Healthcare professionals, Clinicians and Educators who will benefit immensely from this workshop on autism and the current narrative.
Welcome to the Professionals workshop - Understanding Autism - Difference not deficit! Join us at the Open House Church hall 9:30 - 14:30 on24th March 2026 for an insightful event. This workshop aims to provide a deeper understanding of autism, focusing on the differences rather than deficits. It's a great opportunity to learn and connect with professionals in the field. Don't miss out on this enriching experience!
For Healthcare professionals, Clinicians and Educators who will benefit immensely from this workshop on autism and the current narrative.
Welcome to the Professionals workshop - Understanding Autism - Difference not deficit! Join us at the Open House Church hall 9:30 - 14:30 on24th March 2026 for an insightful event. This workshop aims to provide a deeper understanding of autism, focusing on the differences rather than deficits. It's a great opportunity to learn and connect with professionals in the field. Don't miss out on this enriching experience!
This workshop is designed for professionals who work directly with autistic children and young people (CYP) and are looking to enhance their foundational knowledge and understanding of autism. The workshop is evidence-based and current, incorporating the autistic perspective through academic contributions and is guided by both professional insight and lived experience.
The workshop delves into autistic cognition, communication styles, sensory processing differences, and trauma. We address the effects of Alexithymia and examine current theories of autism such as monotropism and the double empathy problem, along with the challenges they present. We advocate for an experience-sensitive approach in collaborating with autistic individuals, not treating them, and we delve into what it means to be neuro-affirming.
We concentrate on the neurodiversity paradigm and critically assess the significant influence of the medical model, which pathologizes behaviors and views autism as a condition needing to be "fixed" or "cured". Autism, being an intrinsic part of one's neurology, cannot—and should not—be fixed or cured. It requires acceptance, understanding, and recognition as a difference, not a deficit.
Good to know
Highlights
- 5 hours
- In person
Refund Policy
Location
Open House Church hall
Station Approach Road
Ramsgate CT11 7RN
How do you want to get there?
