How I use Minecraft to help kids with autism Stuart Duncan

My name is Stuart Duncan,

but I’m actually probably
better known online as “AutismFather.”

That’s me on the internet.

I know the resemblance is uncanny.

(Laughter)

But I’m going to talk
a little bit today about Minecraft.

That’s my Minecraft character.

If you don’t know the game very well,
don’t worry too much about it.

It’s just the medium that I used
at the time to fill a need.

And what I want to talk about applies
to pretty much every situation.

So about four years ago,
I started a Minecraft server

for children with autism
and their families,

and I called it “Autcraft.”

And since then, we’ve been in the news
all around the world,

on television and radio and magazines.

Buzzfeed called us “one of
the best places on the internet.”

We’re also the subject
of an award-winning research paper called

“Appropriating Minecraft as an Assistive
Technology for Youth with Autism.”

It’s a bit of a mouthful.

But you get the idea, I think.

So I want to talk a little bit
about that research paper

and what it’s about,

but first I have to give you
a little bit of history

on how the server came to be.

Back in 2013, everybody
was playing Minecraft,

kids and adults alike,

with and without autism, of course.

But it was the big thing.

But I saw parents on social media
reaching out to other parents,

asking if their autistic children
could play together.

And the reason is that when they tried
to play on public servers,

they kept running into bullies and trolls.

When you have autism, you behave
a little differently sometimes,

sometimes a lot differently.

And we all know a little bit of difference
is all you really need

for a bully to make you their next target.

So these terrible, terrible people online,

they would destroy everything
that they tried to make,

they would steal all their stuff,

and they would kill them
over and over again,

making the game virtually unplayable.

But the worst part,
the part that really hurt the most,

was what these bullies
would say to these kids.

They’d call them rejects

and defects

and retards.

And they would tell these kids,
some as young as six years old,

that society doesn’t want them,

and their own parents
never wanted a broken child,

so they should just kill themselves.

And of course, these kids, you understand,

they would sign off
from these servers angry and hurt.

They would break their keyboards,
they’d quite literally hate themselves,

and their parents felt powerless
to do anything.

So I decided I had to try and help.

I have autism,

my oldest son has autism,

and both my kids and I love Minecraft,

so I have to do something.

So I got myself a Minecraft server,

and I spent some time,
built a little village with some roads

and a big welcome sign and this guy
and a lodge up on a mountaintop,

and tried to make it inviting.

The idea was pretty simple.

I had a white list, so only people
that I approved could join,

and I would just monitor
the server as much as I could,

just to make sure that nothing went wrong.

And that was it, that was the whole
promise: to keep the kids safe

so they could play.

When it was done, I went to Facebook

and posted a pretty simple message
to my friends list, not publicly.

I wanted to see if there
was any interest in this,

and if it really could help.

Turns out that I greatly underestimated
just how much this was needed,

because within 48 hours, I got 750 emails.

I don’t have that many Facebook friends.

(Laughter)

Within eight days, I had to upgrade
the hosting package eight times,

from the bottom package
to the most expensive package they had,

and now, almost four years later,

I have 8,000 names on the white list
from all around the world.

But the reason I’m up here
today to talk to you

isn’t just because I gave kids
a safe place to play.

It’s what happened while they played.

I started hearing from parents

who said their children
were learning to read and write

by playing on the server.

At first they spelled things
by sound, like most kids do,

but because they were part of a community,

they saw other people
spelling the same words properly

and just picked it up.

I started hearing from parents
who said that their nonverbal children

were starting to speak.

They only talked about Minecraft,
but they were talking.

(Laughter)

Some kids made friends at school
for the first time ever.

Some started to share,
even give things to other people.

It was amazing.

And every single parent came to me
and said it was because of Autcraft,

because of what you’re doing.

But why, though?

How could all of this be
just from a video game server?

Well, it goes back to that
research paper I was talking about.

In it, she covers some of the guidelines
I used when I created the server,

guidelines that I think help encourage
people to be their very best.

I hope.

For example, communication.

It can be tough for kids with autism.

It could be tough
for grown-ups without autism.

But I think that kids
should not be punished,

they should be talked to.

Nine times out of ten, when the kids
on the server act out,

it’s because of something that’s happened
in the day at school or home.

Maybe a pet died.

Sometimes it’s just
a miscommunication between two kids.

One doesn’t say what they’re about to do.

And so we just offer to help.

We always tell the children
on the server that we’re not mad,

and they’re not in trouble;

we only want to help.

And it shows that not only do we care,

but we respect them enough
to listen to their point of view.

Respect goes a long way.

Plus, it shows them that they have
everything they need

to be able to resolve these problems
on their own in the future

and maybe even avoid them,
because, you know, communication.

On most servers, as video games are,

children are rewarded,
well, players are rewarded,

for how well they do
in a competition, right?

The better you do,
the better reward you get.

That can be automated; the server
does the work, the code is there.

On Autcraft, we don’t do that.

We have things like
“Player of the Week” and “CBAs,”

which is “Caught Being Awesome.”

(Laughter)

We award players ranks on the servers
based on the attributes they exhibit,

such as the “Buddy” rank for people
who are friendly towards others,

and “Junior Helper” for people
that are helpful towards others.

We have “Senior Helper” for the adults.

But they’re obvious, right?

Like, people know what to expect
and how to earn these things

because of how they’re named.

As soon as somebody signs onto the server,

they know that they’re going
to be rewarded for who they are

and not what they can do.

Our top award, the AutismFather Sword,

which is named after me
because I’m the founder,

is a very powerful sword that
you can’t get in the game any other way

than to show that you completely put
the community above yourself,

and that compassion and kindness
is at the core of who you are.

We’ve given away quite a few
of those swords, actually.

I figure, if we’re watching the server
to make sure nothing bad happens,

we should also watch for the good things
that happen and reward people for them.

We’re always trying
to show all the players

that everybody is considered
to be equal, even me.

But we know we can’t treat
people equally to do that.

Some of the players get angry very easily.

Some of them have additional
struggles on top of autism,

such as OCD or Tourette’s.

So, I have this knack
of remembering all of the players.

I remember their first day,
the conversations we’ve had,

things we’ve talked about,
things they’ve built.

So when somebody comes
to me with a problem,

I handle that situation differently
than I would with any other player,

based on what I know about them.

For the other admins and helpers,
we document everything

so that, whether it’s good or bad
or a concerning conversation,

it’s there, so everybody is aware.

I want to give you one example
of this one player.

He was with us for a little while,

but at some point he started
spamming dashes in the chat,

like a big long line of dashes
all the way across the screen.

A little while later, he’d do it again.

The other players asked him
not to do that, and he’d say, “OK.”

And then he’d do it again.

It started to frustrate the other players.

They asked me to mute him
or to punish him for breaking the rules,

but I knew there had to be
something more to it.

So I went to his aunt, who is
the contact that I have for him.

She explained that
he had gone blind in one eye

and was losing his vision in the other.

So what he was doing
was splitting up the chat

into easier-to-see blocks of text,

which is pretty smart.

So that very same night, I talked
to a friend of mine who writes code

and we created a brand-new
plug-in for the server

that makes it so that
any player on the server,

including him, of course,

could just enter a command
and instantly have every single line

separated by dashes.

Plus, they can make it
asterisks or blank lines

or anything they want –
whatever works best for them.

We even went a little bit extra
and made it so it highlights your name,

so that it’s easier to see
if somebody mentions you.

It’s just one example of how
doing a little bit extra,

a small modification,

still helps everybody be on equal footing,

even though you did a little extra
just for that one player.

The big one is to be not afraid.

The children on my server are not afraid.

They are free to just be themselves,

and it’s because we support
and encourage and celebrate each other.

We all know what it feels like
to be the outcast

and to be hated simply for existing,

and so when we’re together on the server,
we’re not afraid anymore.

For the first two years
or so on the server,

I talked to two children per week
on average that were suicidal.

But they came to me because
I’m the one that made them feel safe.

They felt like I was the only person
in the world they could talk to.

So I guess my message is:

whether you have a charity
or some other organization,

or you’re a teacher or a therapist

or you’re a parent
who is just doing your very best,

or you’re an autistic, like I am,

no matter who you are,

you absolutely must help these children
strip away those fears

before you do anything else,

because anything else
is going to feel forced

unless they’re not afraid.

It’s why positive reinforcement
will always do better

than any form of punishment.

They want to learn when they
feel safe and happy.

It just happens naturally;
they don’t even try to learn.

These are words from the kids
on the server to describe the server.

The one thing I would hope
that you could take away

is that no matter what somebody else
is going through in life right now,

whether they’re being bullied
at school or at home,

if they’re questioning their sexuality
or even their gender,

which happens a lot
in the autism community,

if they’re feeling alone or even suicidal,

you have to live your life in such a way

that that person feels like they can
come to and tell you.

They have to feel perfectly safe
in talking to you about it.

If you want to see
a group of autistic children –

kids who society wrongly thinks
are supposed to be antisocial

and lacking in empathy –

if you want to see them come together
and build the most compassionate

and friendly and generous
community you’ve ever seen,

the kind of place that people
would write about

as one of the best places on the internet,

they’ll do that.

I’ve seen it.

I’m there every day.

But they have some huge obstacles
that they have to overcome to do that,

and it would be really helpful
to have somebody there

who could help to show them that
the only thing they really have to fear

is self-doubt.

So I guess I’m asking you
to please be that person for them,

because to them,

those kids –

it means everything.

Thank you very much.

(Applause)

我的名字是斯图尔特邓肯,

但实际上我可能在
网上更广为人知的是“自闭症之父”。

这就是我在网上。

我知道这种相似是不可思议的。

(笑声)

但是我
今天要谈一点关于 Minecraft 的事情。

那是我的 Minecraft 角色。

如果您对游戏不太了解,
请不要太担心。

这只是我
当时用来满足需求的媒介。

我想谈的几乎适用
于所有情况。

所以大约四年前,
我为自闭症儿童及其家人创建了一个 Minecraft 服务器

,我称之为“Autcraft”。

从那时起,我们就出现在
世界各地的新闻

、电视、广播和杂志上。

Buzzfeed 称我们为“
互联网上最好的地方之一”。

我们
也是获奖研究论文的主题,该论文名为

“将 Minecraft
用作自闭症青少年的辅助技术”。

有点拗口。

但你明白了,我想。

所以我想
谈谈那篇研究论文

及其内容,

但首先我必须给
你一些

关于服务器是如何形成的历史。

早在 2013 年,每个人都
在玩《我的世界》,

孩子和成人都一样

,当然有自闭症和没有自闭症。

但这是一件大事。

但我在社交媒体上看到
父母与其他父母联系,

询问他们的自闭症孩子
是否可以一起玩耍。

原因是当他们试图
在公共服务器上玩时,

他们不断遇到恶霸和巨魔。

当您患有自闭症时,您的
行为有时会有所不同,

有时会大不相同。

我们都知道

,欺负者真正需要的只是一点点不同,才能让你成为他们的下一个目标。

所以这些可怕的、可怕的人在网上,

他们会摧毁
他们试图制作的一切,

他们会偷走他们所有的东西

,他们会
一遍又一遍地杀死他们,

让游戏几乎无法玩。

但最糟糕
的部分,真正伤害最大的部分,

是这些恶霸
会对这些孩子说的话。

他们会称他们为拒绝

、缺陷

和迟钝。

他们会告诉这些
孩子,有些只有六岁

,社会不想要他们

,他们自己的父母
从不想要一个破碎的孩子,

所以他们应该自杀。

当然,这些孩子,你明白,

他们会
生气和受伤地从这些服务器上签字。

他们会打破他们的键盘,
他们会恨自己

,他们的父母感到
无能为力。

所以我决定我必须尝试并提供帮助。

我有自闭症,

我的大儿子有自闭症,

我和我的孩子都喜欢 Minecraft,

所以我必须做点什么。

所以我给自己买了一个 Minecraft 服务器

,我花了一些时间,
建造了一个小村庄,有一些道路

和一个大的欢迎标志,还有这个家伙
和一个山顶上的小屋,

并试图让它变得有吸引力。

这个想法很简单。

我有一个白名单,所以
只有我批准的人才能加入,

我会尽可能多地监控服务器

,以确保没有出现任何问题。

就是这样,这就是全部
承诺:保证孩子们的安全,

这样他们就可以玩耍了。

完成后,我去了 Facebook,

并在我的朋友列表中发布了一条非常简单的
消息,而不是公开的。

我想看看是否有人
对此感兴趣,

以及它是否真的有帮助。

结果我大大低估
了这需要多少,

因为在 48 小时内,我收到了 750 封电子邮件。

我没有那么多 Facebook 朋友。

(笑声)

八天之内,我不得不
将托管包升级八次,

从最底层的包升级
到他们最贵的包

,现在,差不多四年后,

我的白名单上有
来自世界各地的 8000 个名字 .

但我
今天在这里和你交谈

的原因不仅仅是因为我给了孩子们
一个安全的玩耍场所。

这是他们玩的时候发生的事情。

我开始听到

父母说他们的孩子

通过在服务器上玩来学习阅读和写作。

起初,他们
像大多数孩子一样通过声音拼写事物,

但因为他们是社区的一部分,

他们看到其他人
正确拼写相同的单词,

然后就把它捡起来。

我开始听到
父母说他们的非语言

孩子开始说话了。

他们只谈论 Minecraft,
但他们在谈论。

(笑声)

有些孩子有史以来第一次在学校结交了朋友

有些人开始分享,
甚至把东西给别人。

这是惊人的。

每个单亲家长都来找
我说这是因为奥克拉夫特,

因为你正在做的事情。

但是为什么呢?

这一切怎么可能
只是来自视频游戏服务器?

好吧,这可以追溯到
我正在谈论的那篇研究论文。

在其中,她介绍了
我在创建服务器时使用的一些指导

方针,我认为这些指导方针有助于鼓励
人们做到最好。

我希望。

例如,沟通。

对于患有自闭症的孩子来说,这可能很艰难。

对于没有自闭症的成年人来说,这可能会很艰难。

但我认为孩子
不应该受到惩罚,

应该和他们交谈。

十分之九,当
服务器上的孩子表现出来时,

那是因为
白天在学校或家里发生的事情。

也许一只宠物死了。

有时这只是
两个孩子之间的沟通不畅。

没有人说他们将要做什么。

所以我们只是提供帮助。

我们总是告诉
服务器上的孩子,我们没有生气

,他们也没有麻烦;

我们只想提供帮助。

这表明我们不仅关心,

而且我们尊重他们,
足以倾听他们的观点。

尊重有很长的路要走。

此外,这向他们表明,他们拥有

能够在未来自行解决这些问题

甚至可能避免这些问题所需的一切,
因为,你知道,沟通。

在大多数服务器上,就像电子游戏一样,

孩子们会得到奖励,
嗯,玩家会得到奖励,

因为他们
在比赛中的表现,对吧?


做得越好,你得到的奖励就越好。

这可以自动化; 服务器
完成工作,代码就在那里。

在 autcraft,我们不这样做。

我们有诸如
“本周最佳球员”和“CBA”之类的东西

,即“Caught Being Awesome”。

(笑声)

我们
根据玩家表现出的属性在服务器上奖励玩家等级,

例如对他人友好的人为“好友”等级,
对他人有帮助的

人为“初级助手”

我们有成人的“高级助手”。

但它们很明显,对吧?

就像,人们知道会发生什么
以及如何获得这些东西,

因为它们是如何命名的。

一旦有人登录服务器,

他们就知道他们会
因为他们的身份

而不是他们能做什么而获得奖励。

我们的最高奖项 AutismFather Sword

以我的名字命名,
因为我是创始人,它

是一把非常强大的剑,

除了表明你完全
将社区置于自己之上,你无法在游戏中获得它,

并且 同情和善良
是你的核心。 实际上,

我们已经赠送了很多
这样的剑。

我想,如果我们正在观察服务器
以确保没有坏事发生,

我们也应该关注发生的好事
并奖励人们。

我们总是试图
向所有球员

展示每个人都被
认为是平等的,包括我在内。

但我们知道,我们不能
平等对待人们来做到这一点。

有些球员很容易生气。

他们中的一些人
在自闭症之上还有额外的挣扎,

例如强迫症或妥瑞氏症。

所以,我有
记住所有球员的诀窍。

我记得他们的第一天,
我们进行的对话,

我们谈论的
事情,他们建立的事情。

因此,当有人
向我提出问题时,根据我对他们的了解,

我处理这种情况的方式
与我对任何其他球员的处理方式不同

对于其他管理员和助手,
我们会记录所有内容,

以便无论是好是坏
还是有关对话,

它都在那里,所以每个人都知道。

我想给你举
一个这个球员的例子。

他和我们在一起了一段时间,

但在某个时候,他开始
在聊天中发送垃圾破折号,

就像一长串
横穿屏幕的破折号一样。

再过一会儿,他又会这样做。

其他球员要求他
不要那样做,他会说,“好吧。”

然后他会再做一次。

它开始让其他玩家感到沮丧。

他们要求我让他闭嘴
或惩罚他违反规则,

但我知道必须有
更多的东西。

所以我去找他的姑姑,她
是我给他的联络人。

她解释说,
他一只眼睛失明,另一只

眼睛正在失去视力。

所以他所做的
是将聊天

分成更容易看到的文本块,

这非常聪明。

所以就在同一天晚上,我和我的
一个写代码的朋友交谈

,我们为服务器创建了一个全新的
插件,使

服务器上的任何玩家

,当然包括他,

都可以输入一个 命令
并立即将每一行

用破折号分隔。

另外,他们可以将其
设为星号或空行

或任何他们想要的东西——
任何最适合他们的东西。

我们甚至做了一些额外的工作
,使它突出了您的名字,

以便更容易看到
是否有人提到您。

这只是一个例子,说明如何
做一些额外的事情,

一个小的修改,

仍然可以帮助每个人都处于平等的地位,

即使你
只是为那个球员做了一些额外的事情。

最重要的是不要害怕。

我服务器上的孩子们不怕。

他们可以自由地做自己

,这是因为我们
互相支持、鼓励和庆祝。

我们都
知道被抛弃

和仅仅因为存在而被憎恨的感觉

,所以当我们一起在服务器上时,
我们不再害怕了。

在服务器的前两年
左右,

我平均每周与两个
有自杀倾向的孩子交谈。

但他们来找我是因为
我是让他们感到安全的人。

他们觉得我
是世界上唯一可以和他们交谈的人。

所以我想我的信息是:

无论你是有慈善机构
还是其他组织,

或者你是一名教师或治疗师,

或者你是一个
正在尽力而为的父母,

或者你是一个像我一样的自闭症患者 ,

不管你是谁,在你做任何其他事情之前,

你绝对必须帮助这些孩子
摆脱那些恐惧

因为

除非他们不害怕,否则其他任何事情都会感到被迫。

这就是为什么积极强化
总是

比任何形式的惩罚做得更好。

当他们感到安全和快乐时,他们想学习

它只是自然发生;
他们甚至不尝试学习。

这些是
服务器上的孩子们用来描述服务器的词。

我希望你能带走的一件事

是,无论其他人
现在生活中正在经历什么,

无论他们
在学校还是在家里被欺负,

如果他们质疑自己的性取向
甚至性别,

这种情况
在自闭症社区中

经常发生,如果他们感到孤独甚至有自杀倾向,

你必须过这样的生活,

让那个人觉得他们可以
来告诉你。

在与您谈论这件事时,他们必须感到非常安全。

如果你想看到
一群自闭症儿童——

社会错误地认为
他们应该是反社会

和缺乏同理心的孩子——

如果你想看到他们聚在一起
,建立你所见过的最富有同情心

、最友好和慷慨的
社区 看到

,人们会写的那种地方是

互联网上最好的地方之一,

他们会这样做。

我已经看到了它。

我每天都在那里。

但是他们必须克服一些巨大的障碍
才能做到这一点

,如果

有人可以帮助他们向他们展示
他们真正需要担心的唯一事情

就是自我怀疑,那将是非常有帮助的。

所以我想我是在要求
你成为他们的那个人,

因为对他们来说,

那些孩子——

这意味着一切。

非常感谢你。

(掌声)