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Hi Folks

i'm new on here and looking forward to getting to know you. I was wondering if anyone could help with two issues I am having at the moment.

Firstly, I am autistic and graduated from university this summer with a Bachelor of Science in Psychology. I'm taking this area further and have started working as a teaching assistant in a primary school and working with year 2 students with autism and learning disabilities who are in main stream education. I am finding I enjoy the job but am exhausted from the noise and not getting down time away from the children. Last night I had what appeared to be something like an epileptic fit which has never happened before. So I was wondering how many of you have a job, what type of job, and how do you cope at work to make it bearable?

Secondly, I have a boy in the class with Aspergers who is adorable but needs my constant attention. He's big built and solid, and at times needs restraining. I was wondering if there are any teachers, parents or carers who could advise me on how they approach a child like this as I leave school most days feeling battered and bruised.

thanks for your help.

Parents
  • I'm a retired lecturer but was also a disability tutor at the academic level, liasing between colleagues and student disability support - different age group but not dissimilar problems. I've got aspergers and I worked with aspergers students but also with many other disabilities.

    I think it made me more aware of the issues, but also kept me on a steep learning curve... you can never really know enough. I often had to find tactful ways of deflecting student insensitivity or discrimination against disabled students. It is a minefield.

    Hardest part is not giving away to autistic spectrum students why I knew so much, when clearly they must have seen, and often showed awareness, that I was much more insightful than most people they encountered. There was a policy for some disabled staff to make themselves known to students to provide someone to relate to, but autism was too sensitive an area, and in any case I don't think it would ever have helped students to know - autism is a very personal thing and I don't think it helps saying well I managed so should you, or anything of that sort.

    I'm big enough to cope with the larger ones - but apart from one who had rages and punched chairs, I managed fine - despite several times his fist passing close to my head.

    I agree with the sensory overload problem - classroom noise is tricky even with adults. I don't think I could cope with primary school kids - all that high pitched yelling that goes on. You have to find yourself time out opportunities, and perhaps even ask for a concessionary quiet corner.

    You do need to check out any indications of an epileptic fit, just to be on the safe side. They can happen out of the blue and infrequently, but might be the start of something more frequent. Epilepsy can be comorbid with autism.

    However some people report blanking episodes. It is something to do with not being able to filter out background, instead your head suddenly switches off everything around you. It doesn't seem to be dangerous. It has been raised on here before, eg as blanking. But there is a lack of any reference to it in the literature - but then so many things don't get taken seriously by those clever specialists out there - maybe no big money or cudos researching it.

Reply
  • I'm a retired lecturer but was also a disability tutor at the academic level, liasing between colleagues and student disability support - different age group but not dissimilar problems. I've got aspergers and I worked with aspergers students but also with many other disabilities.

    I think it made me more aware of the issues, but also kept me on a steep learning curve... you can never really know enough. I often had to find tactful ways of deflecting student insensitivity or discrimination against disabled students. It is a minefield.

    Hardest part is not giving away to autistic spectrum students why I knew so much, when clearly they must have seen, and often showed awareness, that I was much more insightful than most people they encountered. There was a policy for some disabled staff to make themselves known to students to provide someone to relate to, but autism was too sensitive an area, and in any case I don't think it would ever have helped students to know - autism is a very personal thing and I don't think it helps saying well I managed so should you, or anything of that sort.

    I'm big enough to cope with the larger ones - but apart from one who had rages and punched chairs, I managed fine - despite several times his fist passing close to my head.

    I agree with the sensory overload problem - classroom noise is tricky even with adults. I don't think I could cope with primary school kids - all that high pitched yelling that goes on. You have to find yourself time out opportunities, and perhaps even ask for a concessionary quiet corner.

    You do need to check out any indications of an epileptic fit, just to be on the safe side. They can happen out of the blue and infrequently, but might be the start of something more frequent. Epilepsy can be comorbid with autism.

    However some people report blanking episodes. It is something to do with not being able to filter out background, instead your head suddenly switches off everything around you. It doesn't seem to be dangerous. It has been raised on here before, eg as blanking. But there is a lack of any reference to it in the literature - but then so many things don't get taken seriously by those clever specialists out there - maybe no big money or cudos researching it.

Children
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