Service providers use several types of service-delivery models to support families of persons with autism. One model, positive behavioral support, has gained increasing attention in the literature. Positive behavioral support is a comprehensive approach used to address challenging behavior and improve broad lifestyle outcomes that serve to increase the overall quality of an individual's life. This article describes a service-delivery model for individuals with autism and their families that incorporates the philosophy and essential elements of positive behavioral support. A case study is presented to illustrate one family's experience with the family focus process. Child and family outcomes related to the case study are also described. The key elements of positive behavioral support are discussed in light of providing comprehensive and durable systems of training and supports for families and educators of individuals with autism. he provision of education and t training services for families of -~~ children with autism and other special needs has received increasing attention in the literature (Covert
This essay analyses the previously unstudied relic of Catherine of Siena's right foot, and its relationship to religious reform in late fifteenth‐century Venice. The relic was gifted to the Venetian Dominican convent of Santi Giovanni e Paolo by the Order's Master General, Gioacchino Torriani, between 1487 and 1500. The essay argues that Torriani's donation formed part of a broader effort to establish Catherine's status as a legitimate stigmatic, and hence to promote Dominican Observant reform. The final section explores the possible implications of this in the context of the convent space. Using both textual evidence and other Venetian depictions of the saint – in particular Andrea di Bartolo's Catherine of Siena with Four Mantellate and Giovanni Bellini's lost Catherine of Siena altarpiece – the article analyses the differing constructions of Catherine that were disseminated from Santi Giovanni e Paolo in the fifteenth century, contextualizing the stigmata iconography of the relic and reliquary within these images. In so doing, it aims to highlight the multifaceted nature of late fifteenth‐century Dominican reform, and also to emphasise the ways in which material and artistic evidence can reveal complexities in the narratives of Dominican Observance presented in extant archival material.
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