My wife is a special education teacher and sometimes pulls me into her world. Talk about a fish out of water. Oh I listen when my wife talks about her job and I’ve had my own educational experiences, but I’m most definitely in unfamiliar waters. So you can imagine my thoughts when she asked me to tag along with her recently to a lecture on Autism by Temple Grandin, the autistic scientist, inventor, and author.
Diagnosed with autism when she was three, Grandin’s mother rejected her doctor’s advice to institutionalize her, and provided her with intensive speech therapy, a structured home and a nurturing school environment. Grandin became one of the first autistic people to document the insights she gained from her personal experiences with autism. In addition to autism advocacy, Grandin is well known for her work regarding animal welfare, neurology and philosophy. Claire Danes played a younger version of Grandin in the 2010 HBO movie.

Image by Pexels.
My wife and I both found the presentation interesting, but for different reasons. My wife came away excited about Grandin’s insights into the different ways our brains are wired and how she thinks in pictures. Meanwhile, I came away with key lessons about work and life. For example:
- Make changes specific and practical. To bring about long-lasting change, you need to focus on simple, measurable goals and adoption versus vague top-down, meaningless mandates. For someone who thinks differently than myself, ambiguous goals provide little value.
- On the job training. Grandin worked at a young age and advocates for meeting learners where they are in settings where they can ask questions, be empowered, and not rushed. Nail that and fluency during busy times will come.

Temple Grandin
- Focus on outcomes over technology. We live in a technology-focused world. Tech can be a great tool, but not the be-end-all. Success and adoption is not about perfection, but iteration and repetition.
- Embrace neurodiversity. People learn differently. We miss out on opportunities when we pigeonhole education to one type of learner.

Image by Pexels.
I may be a fish out of water when it comes to education. I may know nothing about the best bait to use or picking where to cast, but to steal another fish-related idiom — with Grandin’s advice I’ll soon be “shooting fish out of a barrel.”
What new tricks or tips have you learned lately?
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That must have been a really interesting talk! Your wife is a hero but you probably already know that! I just finished a book that had an autistic boy in the family and also listened to an essay in our writers group from a woman who is a para to an autistic boy.
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The thing that took me awhile to learn was that like most things autism is a big word and covers a wide variety — nonverbal, verbal, folks affected heavily by sensory issues, others not. And yes, it was interesting to hear Grandin’s take on things.
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My granddaughter is also a special ed teacher. She is currently working with behavioral children. In the past she worked with a theatre group of special needs kids – Downs, autistic, ADHD & others. It takes a special kind of patience to do that job, but also very rewarding for her.
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Yup, need lots of patience. I know that I couldn’t do it. I spent a few weekends with her when we were young working at special needs weekend camps. I did okay … but needed lots of work. Meanwhile she’s a natural! God bless your granddaughter.
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“Embrace diversity” – your point can be expanded to virtually every topic or issue – embracing how we are all different, and don’t reject or attempt to categorize someone else using your own specific standards…great article, thanks for sharing.
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In today’s climate, embrace diversity is seen by some as a bad thing. That really is all of our loss. As you write, when we accept instead of reject, we’re better for it.
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Ah – sooo good! The resonance for me about Temple Grandin will always be the applicability of her encouragement to allow learning to unfold in ways potentially unique to each individual. A ground-breaking idea at the time…and one that educators/systems/schools still struggle with because it takes time to see each person, student, learner as the unique and fabulous human they are. And if I haven’t said it lately, let me add….I love, love, love your sweet wife’s dedication and service as a teacher. Cheers to Kath! 😊💝😊
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“it takes time to see each person, student, learner as the unique and fabulous human they are.” Yes! I work around a lot of corporate trainers and I sent them a similar message. We really do forget too often that people learn differently. I think even as individuals we continue to change. I know that I used to learn from reading. I’m much more of a hands-on learner now. I know that for true learning to take place now I depend on the chance to take something in and then go back process it and come back with an expert to try it out. Thanks Vicki!
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Love that!!! Hands on learning. Gosh yes! With time to visualize and practice? Exactly what I often need. Tactical slowing down! Thanks, Brian! 😉❤️😉
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I thought it was my thick skull. Ahhh, thank you Vicki!!!! I feel like I’m Mikey from the Life Cereal commercials. Hey Vicki said I’m not a mess. Yea, me!!!! Ha, ha. 🙂
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Haha! If you’re a mess I am, too!
🤣❤️🤣
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Brian, I absolutely love that you tagged along with your wife and came away with slightly different lessons, all spot-on! Admittedly, I wasn’t familiar with Grandin until just now, but I really admire how her mother took it upon herself to “rehab” her daughter at home.
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Yes, the HBO movie really shows that fact. Her mother treated her like the rest of her kids and had high expectations but still advocated and fought for Temple too. She has an interesting background. I really just scratched the surface.
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What an important message for all of us, Brian, in this wonderful post. Everyone is different, everyone learns in a different way, and we should acknowledge this. ❤️
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You can say that again! Ha ha, thanks Lauren. 🎉🎉🎉🎉
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WOW Brian, how heartwarming. Love this discussion, while bringing more awareness and education to how we all learn differently. Thanks for sharing my friend. 💖
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I’m no education expert Kym, but I know enough. You give people cookie cutter solutions, you miss so many people. You remember that we all learn differently, the wins keep building. Thanks so much for reading.
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Oh my pleasure Brian! You hit the nail on the head my friend! What a great lesson to behold! 💖🫶🏽💖
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Your wife is an amazing person. It’s so good you went to the lecture with her to learn about learning styles. My son and daughter learn in very different ways. I discovered early on that my daughter was a tactile learner. My son reads to learn. To practice spelling words, I put flour on a baking sheet and my daughter would trace the words in the flour. I found all sorts of techniques like that to help her with her schoolwork.
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Tactile learner … my wife used to do that with our middle son too. He’s very hands-on … it really helped him break words down. As a parent, you do whatever it takes.
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Yes! You’re wife would be more of an expert than I was. But I eventually figured it out. My daughter also had a lot of energy so my husband would have her take a break and do jumping jacks to break up homework.
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I did the jumping jacks thing with my one son too. That’s so funny. He just had so much energy. I figured it out by accident one time that exercise seemed to help him remember things better. Wish that worked for me. Ha. ha.
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Isn’t that funny that our kids were the same in many ways. My daughter went on to earn a swim scholarship for college. She was a physical person. Yes, I wish I was too.
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How incredibly cool to hear Temple Grandin, Brian! And I love your takeaways — especially that tech is a tool, not an outcome! That such a good point that I often lose in the shuffle. Thank you!
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Gotta remember Wynne — I’m the most non-techy person there is!!! Of course, I would write down the tool, not a journey comment. Ha ha. Yea, it was a cool to hear her take on things. Got me thinking about how I best learn!!!
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As a ‘fish out of water’, you came away with some great life lessons! Enjoy the journey.
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A fish out of water. . . The story of my life. Ha, ha. It was an interesting lecture. I got a lot out of it.
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These are great points in dealing with life, Brian. I appreciate you sharing them.
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Yea, that’s what struck me as interesting too. Yes, it describes the classroom, but the rest of the world too. Ha, ha.
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😊
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What a treat for you and your wife to have watched a presentation by Temple Grandin. A true inspiration and icon and leader! Thanks also for sharing your key takeaways. Agreed on all points!
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I kept singing the Sesame Street song “One of These Things (Is Not Like the Others.” Everyone else was a teacher, administrator or parent. Ha, ha. and there was me, laughing because she kept hitting on points that sounded like she was talking more about the corporate world than the classroom. Ha, ha. It was a fun presentation.
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I used to work with people with developmental disabilities, including autism, and found Temple Grandin to be about as practical about autism as anyone else whose material I read. Great takeaways for the corporate world–also very practical!
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Sometimes the corporate world needs some of that practical wisdom. Ha ha! Thanks Belinda!
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Temple Grandin taught at the Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colorado. She’s an amazing lady! ⭐️🤓
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I think she’s still there. She mentioned working there. Yes, definitely an interesting woman!
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I read all about her life about a decade ago. She is a fascinating person and how cool that you got to attend her presentation. We all learn differently and that makes us all the more interesting. Hugs, C
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Oh I was definitely a third wheel … but it was fun to listen to Grsndin’s perspective and insight. It reminded me that we really do learn things at different speeds, different methods. We’re different and the same!!!
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Oh wow, I read her book, The Loving Push, many years ago and it was excellent. She is a real example of what is possible when you receive the right kind of support.
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Yes, she highlighted in her presentation how her mother played a huge role in getting her the right kind of “learning” including jobs, good manners, and even taking care of herself. An incredible story!
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It is definitely an incredible story, one that should be showcased more often. Thank you for writing about her.
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