
directed
by
Vanessa Kaneshiro
click
here for preview
This documentary takes viewers into the lives of children
with autism at home and at school, and profiles the efforts
of their parents and teachers to help them achieve their potential.
The families we meet are of different racial and socio-economic
backgrounds struggling to obtain appropriate services for
their children.
Public
school systems throughout the U.S. are experiencing a rapid
rise in the number of children with autism in mainstream and
special classrooms. In California, where the Department of
Developmental Services has reported a nearly 100 percent rise
in cases of autism since 1999, studies have shown that these
increases are not related merely to changes in diagnostic
criteria.
Seven-year-olds
Adre and Emma, and five-year-old Julian, are in the Autism
Program of the Oakland, California, public schools. This engaging
documentary takes viewers into their lives at home and at
school, and profiles the valiant efforts of their parents
and teachers to help them reach their maximum potential.
Whatever
their incomes, these families struggle to obtain appropriate
services for their children, and the film shows realistically
that such resources are not always distributed fairly. Emma's
parents have enrolled her in an at-home program, while Adre's
single mother, who could certainly
use such a program, isn't even aware that they exist.
Vanessa Kaneshiro - producer/director
Ms. Kaneshiro completed her Master's in Journalism at UC Berkeley, where Talk to Me won the 2003 North Gate Prize for Best Documentary. She has worked on documentary feature films for PBS and MTV, and as an editor at MLB.com and Vh1. She is currently a Video Producer at TIME Magazine's website TIME.com in New York.
Fanlight
Productions - distributor
Sandy
St. Louis - distribution director
Fanlight
Productions is a leading distributor of innovative film and
video works on the social issues of our time, with a special
focus on health care, mental health, professional ethics,
aging, disabilities, the workplace, and gender and family
issues.
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Productions
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