Grant bolsters autism training for educators
Published on February 4th, 2016 by user.
The Tennessee Department of Education (TDOE) has awarded a five-year, $10 million training grant to Vanderbilt Kennedy Center’s Treatment and Research Institute for Autism Spectrum Disorders (TRIAD), continuing a 16-year partnership to provide education and training opportunities for school personnel throughout the state.
This ongoing TDOE support allows TRIAD to continue to provide services to educators serving kindergarten through high school at no direct cost to those educators, their schools or school systems. Further, it allows TRIAD to dramatically increase the number of educational opportunities available to educators.
“This award, the largest in this unique partnership, quadruples the budget of our professional development, education and behavior analysis team,” said Pablo Juárez, director of TRIAD and principal
investigator of this grant contract. “It allows us to continue to create innovative programming to support educators across Tennessee as they serve students of varying needs, including those with autism.”
Through this grant, TRIAD anticipates being able to deliver approximately 100 professional development and training opportunities annually to educators through statewide workshops, trainings and partnerships as well as online education.
“Together with the Tennessee Department of Education, we are able to lead the nation in statewide initiatives aimed directly at understanding what ASD means within our own borders, how that compares nationally and how to best approach early intervention and school-based educational and behavioral support for students from Memphis to Mountain City,” said Zachary Warren, Ph.D., associate professor of Pediatrics, Psychiatry and Special Education and executive director of TRIAD. “We’re very proud to be playing this role within Tennessee.”
This new training grant will support TRIAD’s school-age services from July 2015 through June 2020.
Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder, which according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) impacts one in 68 children. TRIAD became a member of the CDC’s Autism and Developmental Disabilities Monitoring (ADDM) Network in January, which is the national network of sites collectively responsible for the CDC’s prevalence data on ASD.
– by Jennifer Wetzel