ABSTRACT

This book arises from a lifetime's practical experience of work with people with Asperger's syndrome and autism. People with Asperger's syndrome easily drop through the net and fall into the wrong services - sometimes staying at home, depending on their families, sometimes falling into criminal justice or mental health services. Others, of course, fall into employment. Those in between, and there are many, benefit from the coaching approach developed by Bill Goodyear, which is described in this book. The book is crammed with practical tips, real life stories and new thinking. So often research results arrive from highly specialised work - this book attempts to synthesise a range of new learning from a number of fields and present a hopeful view of the condition - there are many entry points to use to create the possibility of forward motion and development.Touching lightly on some specific and recurring problems, the book unpicks our current understanding of the condition and describes in detail how to use coaching to empower and enable rather than to control and direct.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part I|75 pages

All About Asperger's Syndrome

chapter One|11 pages

Asperger's syndrome—overview

chapter Two|14 pages

What is Asperger's and why is it a problem?

chapter Three|7 pages

How does it arise?

chapter Five|6 pages

Current support is poor

chapter Eight|7 pages

Families are central

part II|62 pages

All About Coaching

chapter Nine|16 pages

Coaching

chapter Ten|12 pages

Practical coaching

chapter Eleven|6 pages

Coaching process

chapter Twelve|11 pages

Boundaries and behaviour

chapter Thirteen|11 pages

Coaching people forward

chapter Fourteen|4 pages

Coaching out of crisis

part III|31 pages

Specific Issues

chapter Fifteen|4 pages

Social skills

chapter Sixteen|5 pages

Addiction and habit

chapter Seventeen|4 pages

Anger management

chapter Eighteen|4 pages

Romance

chapter Nineteen|3 pages

Money

chapter Twenty|7 pages

Family bonds: parents' experiences

chapter Twenty-One|2 pages

Special interests