Anderson Connie, Wood Caroline I, Franklin Leah, Iampieri Alan, Sarsony Clare
Department of Health Sciences, Towson University, 8000 York Road-CHP Dean's Office, Towson, MD, 21252, USA.
Department of English (former Research Assistant on the project), Towson University, 8000 York Road, Towson, MD, 21252, USA.
J Autism Dev Disord. 2024 May 14. doi: 10.1007/s10803-024-06353-y.
To explore the perspectives of educators, parents, and individuals on the autism spectrum regarding the qualities of teachers best equipped to support autistic students.
In qualitative interviews parents of autistic adults (n = 35) discussed experiences they and their child faced during the school years, as did young autistic adults (n = 12) and teens (n = 11). Nineteen educators were also interviewed regarding how autistic students and their teachers were faring in public schools as well as what qualities and skills teachers needed to best support these students.
A critical emergent theme was the importance of educators who possess a deep, intuitive understanding of autistic individuals. "Getting autism" involved autism knowledge, obtained through training or experience; an intuitive ability to read, respond to, and appreciate autistic students; and flexibility adapting to these students' needs. Autistic students, parents, and educators alike experienced a stigmatizing judgement and lack of support from unenlightened individuals in the schools. In contrast, there was great appreciation for those who "got autism" and were able to ease the way of autistic students, or support autism-friendly teachers, in whatever grade or situation.
Research investigating how to cultivate, support, and reward autism-affirming teachers is needed. This will likely involve both didactic and experiential autism-focused training as well as recognition of the importance of high emotional intelligence and other qualities of teachers who "get autism." Future research should also explore the effects on these teachers and their students of larger systems, policies, and practices.
探讨教育工作者、家长以及自闭症谱系个体对于最能支持自闭症学生的教师特质的看法。
在定性访谈中,35位自闭症成年患者的家长讨论了他们及其孩子在上学期间所面临的经历,12位自闭症青年和11位青少年也参与了讨论。此外,还采访了19位教育工作者,了解自闭症学生及其教师在公立学校的情况,以及教师为了最好地支持这些学生需要具备哪些特质和技能。
一个关键的新出现主题是,拥有对自闭症个体深刻、直观理解的教育工作者非常重要。“理解自闭症”包括通过培训或经验获得的自闭症知识;读懂、回应并理解自闭症学生的直观能力;以及适应这些学生需求的灵活性。自闭症学生、家长和教育工作者都曾在学校中遭受来自不开明人士的污名化评判和缺乏支持。相比之下,人们非常感激那些“理解自闭症”并能够为自闭症学生铺平道路或支持对自闭症友好的教师的人,无论他们处于哪个年级或何种情况。
需要开展研究,探讨如何培养、支持和奖励认可自闭症的教师。这可能需要既有侧重于自闭症的理论教学,又有实践经验的培训,同时还要认识到高情商以及其他“理解自闭症”的教师特质的重要性。未来的研究还应探讨更大的系统、政策和实践对这些教师及其学生的影响。