Rapid Prompting Method: Steady Tapping Is Suspicious for Fraud
Videos of nonspeaking autistic people using rapid prompting method usually show a fixed, uniform tapping with their index finger – as though tapping to a music beat. […]
Videos of nonspeaking autistic people using rapid prompting method usually show a fixed, uniform tapping with their index finger – as though tapping to a music beat. […]
Did Woody Brown write “Upward Bound” or did mom Mary pen this novel? Why would this mom falsely claim her nonverbal, severely autistic son wrote it? […]
How did Mary Brown convince UCLA’s professors to give her nonverbal son Woody two degrees when there’s video proof he can’t spell a single word? […]
Woody Brown doesn’t look at the letter board as he allegedly spells. Mom explains this away by saying he needs to look elsewhere to maintain focus. […]
Why don’t articles about nonverbal autistics include videos showing them composing the eloquent commentaries they claim to create via letter boards or typing — with the camera aimed on the letters they’re selecting? [...]
I’m autistic and am disbelieving of the “rapid prompting method,” which is just another name for facilitated communication (long disproven by science). […]
Don’t let the funky name, “rapid prompting method,” fool you: This is facilitated communication in disguise with just some minor procedural differences. […]