Creating Quality of Life for Adults on the Autism Spectrum: The Story of Bittersweet Farms provides an overview of the first farmstead community for adults with autism established in North America. The book also provides a detailed description and evaluation of the intervention model used to promote quality of life for the adults with autism who live as residents at Bittersweet Farms.
Through its aim to provide a better understanding of adults with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), the text enables a deeper appreciation of the Bittersweet Farms model, which meets the residential and therapeutic needs of this population that are not often well understood. The book discusses the apprenticeship model used at Bittersweet Farms along with examples of how residents benefit from this approach. The text expands upon its approach through the inclusion of specific guidelines that can be adopted for improved communication and social interaction, managing troublesome behaviors, calming anxieties and establishing daily routines. These guidelines reflect a positive approach to intervention and are consistent with the quality-of-life emphasis inherent in the Bittersweet model.
This book will serve as a seminal work for professionals and paraprofessionals working with people with ASD. It will further be of interest to parents, and relatives, of people with ASD along with researchers and policy-makers concerned about the ASD adult population, and those interested in services for people with ASD.
About the Author: Jeanne Dennler, PhD, is a retired clinical psychologist with over 40 years of working in private practice as a psychologist specializing in children and adults with autism, and has published numerous articles in professional journals. She served on the Board of Bittersweet Farms and is a former Clinical Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, division of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics.
Carol S. Quick, M.A., worked as a special education teacher, administrator, and director of varied federal and state funded early intervention projects. Her professional writing accomplishments include production of professional development modules, grant proposals, and evaluation plans. She has also served as a board member and consultant for numerous disability focused organizations.
Ruth Wilson, PhD, has authored several academic books, including Special Educational Needs in the Early Years (Routledge, 2003), Nature and Young Children (Routledge, 2018), and Naturally Inclusive (Gryphon House, 2022). She currently works with the Children & Nature Network as Curator of the Research Library.