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News and Knowledge

OAR is already on its way to meeting our goals for our annual National Autism Awareness Month Campaign:

  • Educate youth about their peers with autism.
  • Empower the autism community with information resources.
  • Support autism siblings with resources for kids, teens, and parents.
  • Support adults in the autism community through OAR’s Hire Autism Initiative.
  • Raise money for new research and resources.

We still need your help to make it to the finish line. Here are some suggestions for how you can help during and beyond Autism Awareness Month.

Goal 1: Educate Youth About Their Peers with Autism.

OAR aims to accomplish this by providing peer education materials to 9,000 general education students in grades K-8. Whether you are a parent, a classroom teacher, or a high school student seeking volunteer credit, OAR provides the tools needed to explain what autism means in a friendly and age-appropriate way. The Kit for Kids program revolves around the “What’s Up with Nick?” story, and includes a classroom set of story booklets, lesson plan, poster, and printable workbooks.

The Autism Tuned In website expands the “What’s Up with Nick?” story and engages students through animated videos and gaming activities. Teachers who use the Autism Tuned In website can award prizes to students who successfully complete the program and track student activity.

How you can help: Start an autism peer education program. The impact of this peer education resource is magnified when entire schools and districts participate, rather than a few scattered classrooms. These types of efforts typically start with one individual or group that commits to making autism and peer acceptance a priority. You can be that catalyst for change. We offer guidance for parents, educators, and administrators on starting an autism peer education initiative. To get started, order your Kit for Kids set. For more information, email programs@researchautism.org.

Goal 2: Empower the Autism Community with Information Resources.

OAR aims to accomplish this by sending 5,500 information guides to communities across the nation. These valuable resources help parents, educators, professionals, and self-advocates answer their immediate questions related to safety, transitions, research, professional development training, and more. OAR also provides in-kind donations of “A Guide to Safety” to autism conferences, events, and workshops upon request.

 How you can help: Pass the information along. You can help by equipping people in your community with these informative resources. If you know of any local support groups, families, schools, organizations, medical facilities, or first responders, please spread the word to them. Knowledge is power, and these resources will equip your local community with the knowledge it needs. You can order printed copies online. If you want to share bulk copies at your next local event, contact us at programs@researchautism.org.

Goal 3: Support Autism Siblings with Resources for Kids, Teens, and Parents.

OAR aims to distribute 1,800 sibling guides to families and sibling workshops. Written by siblings of autism for siblings of autism, OAR’s three siblings workbooks offer guidance to families on how to productively address conflicts that often arise in the sibling relationships, including fairness, meltdowns, inequality with attention, and more.

How you can help: Tell people about these free resources. OAR provides the siblings guides as in-kind donations to autism conferences and sibling workshops upon request. Remember, up to two copies of each of OAR’s guides are available for free through our online store. To connect with someone from our staff about bulk orders, contact programs@researchautism.org with the subject line, “siblings guides.”

Goal 4: Support Adults with Autism Through OAR’s Hire Autism Initiative.

OAR’s employment initiative, Hire Autism, will continue its initial demonstration in Northern Virginia during April. Hire Autism helps applicants access autism-friendly employers, a jobs board, and resources to assist in their job search. OAR’s top goals for April are to help five more applicants find jobs and increase the number of applicants by 50 percent.

Beyond that, OAR will continue to recruit additional employers and Hire Autism advocates and begin its outreach to prospective partners within the autism community in preparation for phased national expansion of the program later this year.

How you can help: Spread the word about Hire Autism and contribute your expertise. There are many ways you can get involved with Hire Autism. You can spread the word about the Hire Autism website to your friends and family using social media. If you know of any businesses in the Northern Virginia area that may be interested, give them OAR’s informational brochure. If you like to write and are interested in the topic of adult employment, contribute to the Hire Autism blog.

To learn more about how you can get involved or to request brochures and other Hire Autism promotional materials to share, contact info@hireautism.org.

Goal 5: Raise Money for New Research and Resources.

Earlier this year the RUN FOR AUTISM set a goal of raising $15,000  through our DIY Athletic Events program. Heading into Autism Awareness Month we have almost reached that goal.  OAR has decided to raise the stakes and push for a new goal.

OAR’s goal is to raise over $100,000 during the month of April through the RUN FOR AUTISM program. OAR will be continuing to recruit RUN FOR AUTISM teams for the Bank of America Chicago Marathon, Marine Corps Marathon, TCS New York City Marathon, and multiple triathlon events with a goal of having over 400 athletes signed up for a 2018 RUN FOR AUTISM race by the end of April.

All funds raised will go toward supporting research grants and distributing resources. OAR also hopes the DIY – Athletic Events program will highlight OAR resources and get them into the hands of new readers.

How you can help: Run a race and fundraise for autism. Join the RUN FOR AUTISM at one of the events listed above or another featured event and guarantee your entry to a number of world-class races and triathlons. If you are looking for an excuse to have an adventure, dedicate your miles to autism research at the BMW Berlin Marathon. If you want to stay closer to home the Rock ‘n’ Roll Series, Tough Mudder, or The Super Run is sure to have a race nearby.

Or pick any race – a neighborhood 5K, the state’s big marathon, a local triathlon, or something in between – and register on that race’s website. Then sign up for OAR’s DIY program and raise money for autism research.

For more information, contact Sean Flynn, director, RUN FOR AUTISM, at 703-243-8020 or run@researchautism.org.

Share Your Photos

We want to know how you are gearing up for National Autism Awareness Month. Email your stories and pictures to programs@researchautism.org or share them on OAR’s Facebook page. OAR is looking for both candid and posed photos of parents, self-advocates, children of all ages, siblings, grandparents, friends, and teachers. If it’s a photo you like and are willing to share, please send it in. Be sure to provide written permission for OAR’s use of the photos you submit.

April’s National Autism Awareness Month is here! If you are interested in joining the cause by volunteering, proposing new ideas, or in some other way, then please contact OAR at programs@researchautism.org or 703-243-3466.