School of Education, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, USA.
Department of Health & Behavior Studies, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, USA.
Autism Res. 2021 Feb;14(2):356-368. doi: 10.1002/aur.2383. Epub 2020 Sep 12.
Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) demonstrate heterogeneous writing skills that are generally lower than their typically developing (TD) peers and similar to peers with attention difficulties like attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Recent evidence suggests children with ASD spend less time engaging in writing tasks compared to their peers, but previous studies have not examined engagement specifically within the writing task environment. This study used video observation data collected from 121 school-age children (60 children with ASD, 32 children with ADHD, and 29 TD children) to compare differences in visual attention and writing task behaviors and relationships between task behaviors and age, cognitive skills, and ASD and ADHD symptom severity. Findings indicated that groups mostly spent time looking at and writing on the draft, though this was lowest in the ASD group. No differences were found between the ASD and ADHD groups after accounting for task behavior durations as percentages of total used task time. Groups spent little time looking at their outlines and looking away from the task, with all groups spending relatively more time looking at the task picture. Time spent engaged with the draft showed a positive relationship with writing performance across groups, but a negative relationship between time spent looking at the task picture and writing performance only appeared for the ADHD group. The ASD and ADHD groups showed negative associations between draft engagement and ASD symptom severity but not ADHD symptom severity. Implications are discussed for understanding writing task engagement in research and instructional contexts. LAY SUMMARY: Children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) demonstrate variable writing skills. Here, we examine how children with ASD engage during a writing task by using video observation data to compare their engagement to peers with and without attention difficulties. Findings indicate (a) lower draft engagement and similar task disengagement in children with ASD compared to their peers and (b) moderate-to-strong relationships between writing scores and ASD symptom severity with within-task engagement in children with ASD and their peers with attention difficulties.
自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)儿童的写作技能存在异质性,通常低于其典型发育(TD)同龄人,与注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)等注意力困难的同龄人相似。最近的证据表明,与同龄人相比,ASD 儿童在写作任务上花费的时间更少,但以前的研究并未专门在写作任务环境中检查参与度。本研究使用从 121 名学龄儿童(60 名 ASD 儿童、32 名 ADHD 儿童和 29 名 TD 儿童)收集的视频观察数据,比较了视觉注意力和写作任务行为以及任务行为与年龄、认知技能和 ASD 和 ADHD 症状严重程度之间的关系。研究结果表明,各组主要将时间花在草稿上,尽管 ASD 组的时间最少。在考虑任务行为持续时间占总用时的百分比后,ASD 和 ADHD 组之间没有发现差异。各组在查看大纲和离开任务的时间都很少,所有组在任务图片上花费的时间相对更多。与写作表现呈正相关,与 ADHD 组仅在 ADHD 组中,花在草稿上的时间与写作表现呈负相关。ASD 和 ADHD 组在草稿参与度与 ASD 症状严重程度之间表现出负相关,但与 ADHD 症状严重程度之间没有关联。讨论了在研究和教学背景下理解写作任务参与度的意义。
非专业翻译,仅供参考