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A request from one of our viewers who asked about the movie "Spellers." This educational video is intended to draw attention to the problem of facilitator cuing in Facilitated Communication (FC). FC is also known as Spelling to Communicate (S2C), Rapid Prompting Method (RPM), and many other names. In this video, Dr. Sarathy and her son, Sid, use Spelling to Communicate, as featured in the movie "Spellers." Dr. Sarathy appears to understand that FC is has no scientifically rigorous proof to back up proponent claims of independence, but she uses it anyone. But, is does a belief in FC adequately prevent facilitator control and cuing during letter selection? To date, there is no reliably controlled evidence to prove that FC/S2C/RPM or any of their variants produce independent communication. Rather, research shows that facilitators, not the individuals being subjected to it, control FC-generated messages. Organizations such as the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) and the American Association on Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities oppose its use, citing lack of scientific evidence, facilitator control, prompt dependency, financial and opportunity costs, and other harms. Clever Hands: Uncontrolled Intelligence in Facilitated Communication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/12872... Wheeler, DL, Jacobson, JW, Paglieri, RA, and Schwartz, AA. (1993). An experimental assessment of facilitated communication. Mental Retardation. Vol 31 (1), 49-60. FMI: Controlled Studies: https://www.facilitatedcommunication.... FMI about systematic reviews, opposition statements, controlled studies, FC in the legal system and more: http://www.facilitatedcommunication.org