Thursday 18th September 2025
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Grandin Speaks To Huge Crowd At UTM

 
 
Martin, Tenn. – Dr. Temple Grandin, an internationally-known animal behaviorist and autism advocate, spoke to an overflow crowd Tuesday at the University of Tennessee at Martin. Her presentation, titled “Developing Individuals Who Have Different Kinds of Minds,” was sponsored by the Ed and Llew Jones Distinguished Lecture Series.
 
Grandin focused her comments on the value of individuals who see the world differently than those around them, such as those on the autism spectrum and those with other learning difficulties such as dyslexia.
 
“We’ve got to help the minds that are different succeed. We need these minds that are different, and we must not screen them out because the world needs all kinds of minds,” she said. Grandin gave examples from her own life to illustrate the need for creative classes such as woodworking, welding, sewing and theater in schools. She has invented many restraint systems and handling facilities for the livestock industry, and those pursuits began with an early exposure to construction and art.
 
“When I was a little kid, four years old, I had no speech. I had all the full-blown symptoms of autism. Nobody thought I would go anywhere, but my ability in art was always encouraged. Take the thing the kid is good at and build on it; build on the area of strength,” she said. “I’ve seen too many kids (who) are becoming their disability.”
 
Grandin is currently a professor of animal science at Colorado State University in Fort Collins, Colorado. Her specialties include the behavior and handling of cattle and pigs; the design of livestock handling facilities and restraint systems; and the study of animal welfare in the meat industry.
 
Her presentation is available through archived video on the OVC Digital Network.
 
For more information on Grandin’s appearance, contact Dr. Emalee Buttrey, assistant professor of animal science, at 731-881-7255 or ebuttrey@utm.edu, or Sara Rachels, Paul Meek Library, at 731-881-7083 or srachel1@utm.edu.
 
 

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