![]() ![]() ![]() McGovern spent a year traveling the country and looking at the options for work and housing-and to her surprise discovered reasons to be optimistic. ![]() Here, McGovern expands on her #1 New York Times piece, "Looking into the Future for a Child with Autism," a future that often appears grim, with statistics like an 85 percent unemployment rate for people with ID. The catch is These resources, limited as they may be, have trained Ethan in skills for jobs that don't exist and a life he can't have. Once Ethan turns twenty-two, he will fall off the "Disability Cliff." By aging out of the school system, he'll lose access to most social, educational, and vocational resources. A game-changing exploration of what the future holds for the first generation of mainstreamed neurodiverse kids that is coming of age.Īfter sleepless nights, intensive research, and twenty-one years of raising a child, Ethan, with autism and intellectual disability, Cammie McGovern is approaching a distinct catch-22. ![]()
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