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How I use Minecraft to help kids with autism

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    My name is Stuart Duncan,
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    but I'm actually probably
    better known online as "AutismFather."
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    That's me on the internet.
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    I know the resemblance is uncanny.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I'm going to talk
    a little bit today about Minecraft.
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    That's my Minecraft character.
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    If you don't know the game very well,
    don't worry too much about it.
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    It's just the medium that I used
    at the time to fill a need.
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    And what I want to talk about applies
    to pretty much every situation.
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    So about four years ago,
    I started a Minecraft server
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    for children with autism
    and their families,
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    and I called it "Autcraft."
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    And since then, we've been in the news
    all around the world,
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    on television and radio and magazines.
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    Buzzfeed called us "one of
    the best places on the internet."
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    We're also the subject
    of an award-winning research paper called
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    "Appropriating Minecraft as an Assistive
    Technology for Youth with Autism."
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    It's a bit of a mouthful.
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    But you get the idea, I think.
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    So I want to talk a little bit
    about that research paper
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    and what it's about,
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    but first I have to give you
    a little bit of history
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    on how the server came to be.
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    Back in 2013, everybody
    was playing Minecraft,
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    kids and adults alike,
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    with and without autism, of course.
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    But it was the big thing.
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    But I saw parents on social media
    reaching out to other parents,
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    asking if their autistic children
    could play together.
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    And the reason is that when they tried
    to play on public servers,
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    they kept running into bullies and trolls.
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    When you have autism, you behave
    a little differently sometimes,
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    sometimes a lot differently.
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    And we all know a little bit of difference
    is all you really need
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    for a bully to make you their next target.
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    So these terrible, terrible people online,
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    they would destroy everything
    that they tried to make,
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    they would steal all their stuff,
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    and they would kill them
    over and over again,
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    making the game virtually unplayable.
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    But the worst part,
    the part that really hurt the most,
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    was what these bullies
    would say to these kids.
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    They'd call them rejects
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    and defects
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    and retards.
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    And they would tell these kids,
    some as young as six years old,
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    that society doesn't want them,
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    and their own parents
    never wanted a broken child,
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    so they should just kill themselves.
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    And of course, these kids, you understand,
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    they would sign off
    from these servers angry and hurt.
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    They would break their keyboards,
    they'd quite literally hate themselves,
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    and their parents felt powerless
    to do anything.
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    So I decided I had to try and help.
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    I have autism,
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    my oldest son has autism,
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    and both my kids and I love Minecraft,
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    so I have to do something.
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    So I got myself a Minecraft server,
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    and I spent some time,
    built a little village with some roads
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    and a big welcome sign and this guy
    and a lodge up on a mountaintop,
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    and tried to make it inviting.
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    The idea was pretty simple.
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    I had a white list, so only people
    that I approved could join,
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    and I would just monitor
    the server as much as I could,
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    just to make sure that nothing went wrong.
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    And that was it, that was the whole
    promise: to keep the kids safe
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    so they could play.
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    When it was done, I went to Facebook
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    and posted a pretty simple message
    to my friends list, not publicly.
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    I wanted to see if there
    was any interest in this,
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    and if it really could help.
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    Turns out that I greatly underestimated
    just how much this was needed,
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    because within 48 hours, I got 750 emails.
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    I don't have that many Facebook friends.
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    (Laughter)
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    Within eight days, I had to upgrade
    the hosting package eight times,
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    from the bottom package
    to the most expensive package they had,
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    and now, almost four years later,
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    I have 8,000 names on the white list
    from all around the world.
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    But the reason I'm up here
    today to talk to you
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    isn't just because I gave kids
    a safe place to play.
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    It's what happened while they played.
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    I started hearing from parents
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    who said their children
    were learning to read and write
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    by playing on the server.
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    At first they spelled things
    by sound, like most kids do,
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    but because they were part of a community,
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    they saw other people
    spelling the same words properly
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    and just picked it up.
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    I started hearing from parents
    who said that their nonverbal children
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    were starting to speak.
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    They only talked about Minecraft,
    but they were talking.
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    (Laughter)
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    Some kids made friends at school
    for the first time ever.
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    Some started to share,
    even give things to other people.
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    It was amazing.
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    And every single parent came to me
    and said it was because of Autcraft,
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    because of what you're doing.
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    But why, though?
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    How could all of this be
    just from a video game server?
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    Well, it goes back to that
    research paper I was talking about.
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    In it, she covers some of the guidelines
    I used when I created the server,
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    guidelines that I think help encourage
    people to be their very best.
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    I hope.
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    For example, communication.
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    It can be tough for kids with autism.
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    It could be tough
    for grown-ups without autism.
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    But I think that kids
    should not be punished,
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    they should be talked to.
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    Nine times out of ten, when the kids
    on the server act out,
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    it's because of something that's happened
    in the day at school or home.
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    Maybe a pet died.
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    Sometimes it's just
    a miscommunication between two kids.
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    One doesn't say what they're about to do.
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    And so we just offer to help.
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    We always tell the children
    on the server that we're not mad,
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    and they're not in trouble;
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    we only want to help.
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    And it shows that not only do we care,
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    but we respect them enough
    to listen to their point of view.
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    Respect goes a long way.
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    Plus, it shows them that they have
    everything they need
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    to be able to resolve these problems
    on their own in the future
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    and maybe even avoid them,
    because, you know, communication.
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    On most servers, as video games are,
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    children are rewarded,
    well, players are rewarded,
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    for how well they do
    in a competition, right?
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    The better you do,
    the better reward you get.
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    That can be automated; the server
    does the work, the code is there.
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    On Autcraft, we don't do that.
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    We have things like
    "Player of the Week" and "CBAs,"
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    which is "Caught Being Awesome."
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    (Laughter)
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    We award players ranks on the servers
    based on the attributes they exhibit,
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    such as the "Buddy" rank for people
    who are friendly towards others,
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    and "Junior Helper" for people
    that are helpful towards others.
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    We have "Senior Helper" for the adults.
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    But they're obvious, right?
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    Like, people know what to expect
    and how to earn these things
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    because of how they're named.
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    As soon as somebody signs onto the server,
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    they know that they're going
    to be rewarded for who they are
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    and not what they can do.
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    Our top award, the AutismFather Sword,
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    which is named after me
    because I'm the founder,
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    is a very powerful sword that
    you can't get in the game any other way
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    than to show that you completely put
    the community above yourself,
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    and that compassion and kindness
    is at the core of who you are.
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    We've given away quite a few
    of those swords, actually.
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    I figure, if we're watching the server
    to make sure nothing bad happens,
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    we should also watch for the good things
    that happen and reward people for them.
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    We're always trying
    to show all the players
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    that everybody is considered
    to be equal, even me.
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    But we know we can't treat
    people equally to do that.
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    Some of the players get angry very easily.
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    Some of them have additional
    struggles on top of autism,
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    such as OCD or Tourette's.
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    So, I have this knack
    of remembering all of the players.
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    I remember their first day,
    the conversations we've had,
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    things we've talked about,
    things they've built.
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    So when somebody comes
    to me with a problem,
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    I handle that situation differently
    than I would with any other player,
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    based on what I know about them.
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    For the other admins and helpers,
    we document everything
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    so that, whether it's good or bad
    or a concerning conversation,
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    it's there, so everybody is aware.
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    I want to give you one example
    of this one player.
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    He was with us for a little while,
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    but at some point he started
    spamming dashes in the chat,
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    like a big long line of dashes
    all the way across the screen.
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    A little while later, he'd do it again.
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    The other players asked him
    not to do that, and he'd say, "OK."
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    And then he'd do it again.
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    It started to frustrate the other players.
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    They asked me to mute him
    or to punish him for breaking the rules,
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    but I knew there had to be
    something more to it.
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    So I went to his aunt, who is
    the contact that I have for him.
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    She explained that
    he had gone blind in one eye
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    and was losing his vision in the other.
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    So what he was doing
    was splitting up the chat
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    into easier-to-see blocks of text,
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    which is pretty smart.
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    So that very same night, I talked
    to a friend of mine who writes code
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    and we created a brand-new
    plug-in for the server
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    that makes it so that
    any player on the server,
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    including him, of course,
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    could just enter a command
    and instantly have every single line
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    separated by dashes.
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    Plus, they can make it
    asterisks or blank lines
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    or anything they want --
    whatever works best for them.
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    We even went a little bit extra
    and made it so it highlights your name,
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    so that it's easier to see
    if somebody mentions you.
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    It's just one example of how
    doing a little bit extra,
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    a small modification,
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    still helps everybody be on equal footing,
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    even though you did a little extra
    just for that one player.
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    The big one is to be not afraid.
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    The children on my server are not afraid.
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    They are free to just be themselves,
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    and it's because we support
    and encourage and celebrate each other.
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    We all know what it feels like
    to be the outcast
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    and to be hated simply for existing,
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    and so when we're together on the server,
    we're not afraid anymore.
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    For the first two years
    or so on the server,
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    I talked to two children per week
    on average that were suicidal.
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    But they came to me because
    I'm the one that made them feel safe.
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    They felt like I was the only person
    in the world they could talk to.
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    So I guess my message is:
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    whether you have a charity
    or some other organization,
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    or you're a teacher or a therapist
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    or you're a parent
    who is just doing your very best,
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    or you're an autistic, like I am,
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    no matter who you are,
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    you absolutely must help these children
    strip away those fears
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    before you do anything else,
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    because anything else
    is going to feel forced
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    unless they're not afraid.
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    It's why positive reinforcement
    will always do better
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    than any form of punishment.
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    They want to learn when they
    feel safe and happy.
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    It just happens naturally;
    they don't even try to learn.
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    These are words from the kids
    on the server to describe the server.
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    The one thing I would hope
    that you could take away
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    is that no matter what somebody else
    is going through in life right now,
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    whether they're being bullied
    at school or at home,
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    if they're questioning their sexuality
    or even their gender,
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    which happens a lot
    in the autism community,
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    if they're feeling alone or even suicidal,
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    you have to live your life in such a way
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    that that person feels like they can
    come to and tell you.
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    They have to feel perfectly safe
    in talking to you about it.
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    If you want to see
    a group of autistic children --
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    kids who society wrongly things
    are supposed to be antisocial
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    and lacking in empathy --
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    if you want to see them come together
    and build the most compassionate
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    and friendly and generous
    community you've ever seen,
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    the kind of place that people
    would write about
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    as one of the best places on the internet,
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    they'll do that.
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    I've seen it.
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    I'm there every day.
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    But they have some huge obstacles
    that they have to overcome to do that,
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    and it would be really helpful
    to have somebody there
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    who could help to show them that
    the only thing they really have to fear
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    is self-doubt.
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    So I guess I'm asking you
    to please be that person for them,
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    because to them,
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    those kids --
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    it means everything.
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    Thank you very much.
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    (Applause)
Title:
How I use Minecraft to help kids with autism
Speaker:
Stuart Duncan
Description:

more » « less
Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
10:56

English subtitles

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