Hands-on Training and Research Prepared Her for the Role
02/08/2017
By Katharine Webster
Last fall, Devon White 鈥15 鈥16 was living in the trendy Davis Square neighborhood of Somerville. She had just graduated with her master鈥檚 in autism studies at 51视频 and had a job she loved, working with children on the autism spectrum.
But she still felt restless. So when she ran across a LinkedIn job posting for a (BCBA) to help run a brand-new autism treatment center in Kuwait, she applied 鈥 even though she was still waiting for the results of her BCBA exam.
鈥淚 always thought that if I could find a way to travel and help people, that would be my dream,鈥 she says.
Now her dream has come true. In January she began work as the programs director and lead BCBA at Malak Special Needs Services, a startup that just opened its doors to a small number of children.
But when they returned to Kuwait, their son regressed. So Alebrahim decided to open a state-of-the-art treatment center in Kuwait City with BCBAs, speech therapists and occupational therapists under one roof. White says the Malak center is the first affordable, comprehensive treatment center in Kuwait.
鈥淣ow the center is a dream place. If you could choose one facility to work with kids, this would be it,鈥 White says. 鈥淭hey have all the materials they need. They just need somebody to put everything into action.鈥
That would be White, who accepted the job as programs director after visiting Kuwait in early December. She arrived at night and checked into a lavish hotel suite filled with fruit baskets and welcome cards. But when the call to prayer woke her at 4 a.m. and she opened her curtains, she was confronted by a landscape of scattered skyscrapers and desert.
鈥淓verything was brown and dust-colored, and I thought, 鈥楳aybe this is a huge mistake!鈥欌 she admits. 鈥淏ut six hours later, I was at the center, and I was so happy and energized by all the people who wanted to learn and wanted to work, and by the amount of need. And it felt like a little family.鈥
鈥淭here鈥檚 a huge discrepancy in money and resources, and that鈥檚 even more true in a country like Kuwait where health insurance doesn鈥檛 cover autism treatment,鈥 she says.
White says she never would have had the confidence to take the job in Kuwait without the research experience and rigorous training she got here, including studying 3-year-olds with Assoc. Prof. Richard Serna. The study took place at a Head Start program in Lowell, where many of their research subjects were non-native English speakers and immigrants.
鈥淲hen you鈥檙e in this inner-city environment or in a different country, there are so many cultural sensitivities you need to attend to,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t matters because you need to make relationships with parents and families, too, for this work to be meaningful.鈥
White also did research as an undergraduate and graduate student with Assoc. Profs. Doreen Arcus and Ashleigh Hillier. With Arcus, she designed an ongoing study, based on her own family experience, to determine whether children with ASD develop better social skills if they have a neurotypical sibling. With Hillier, she published . 聽She hopes eventually to do original research in Kuwait.
鈥淚鈥檓 so lucky to have so many amazing mentors,鈥 she says. 鈥淚n terms of my confidence and knowing my own competency, the research experiences were huge. And I would never be able to make this move across the world if I weren鈥檛 a confident researcher and clinician now.鈥