Clothes Sensitivity

Hello - my 14yo son is on the spectrum and I have a question. He is very self reliant i.e. makes his pack lunch, does his homework without prompting and likes to be in control which is great. 

He has always had clothes sensitivities but has got better with age. 

 He went to specialist schools but recently moved to a mainstream school and we all thought he with struggle with the transition but he has done amazingly well.

My question is that he has to sleep in his school shirt and tie and he cant bare to put it on in the morning. 

Is this something i should be getting him out of the habit of or say oh well he done amazing in so many areas that this is a small thing. 

My worries are safety (sleeping with a tie on), smell (he doesn't yet) , tidiness (he looks like he has slept in his clothes) 

When I ask him he says no and i can see the look of stress in his eyes

Parents
  • I have clothing texture problems and they are very real - in my case touching nylon and other man-made textiles is revolting - makes me want to curl up and die. I therefore would not recommend trying to enforce anything on your son that might have serious sensory effects. This sounds to me like a 'reasonable accommodation' issue for the school. If your son has no trouble putting on other types of shirt in the morning then the fault is with the 'school shirt and tie'. If the school are aware of their duty of care for 'disabled' pupils they should be open to negotiation. Perhaps a 'polo shirt' and clip on tie might be an improvement, or no tie? If the uniform is causing problems then it is the uniform that needs to be altered, not your son.

  • I have been trying to come up with a physical disability equivalent, and the following is the best I could do. If a pupil had recently had a tracheotomy for any reason, no school would require them to wear a buttoned up collar or a tie. Just because your son's difficulties with a collar and tie are not physical, but are sensory, does not mean that they are any less valid. Autism is classed as a disability and accommodations for its effects should be as automatic as they are for any physical disability. I think that you should make the school aware of the problems your son is having with the uniform, and your very reasonable safety concerns about his wearing a tie overnight. I would also add some information about how real sensory issues are for autistic people and that your son cannot just stop his behaviour and that it is not a whim. They will then know the full facts and the burden of coming up with a reasonable compromise is then theirs.

Reply
  • I have been trying to come up with a physical disability equivalent, and the following is the best I could do. If a pupil had recently had a tracheotomy for any reason, no school would require them to wear a buttoned up collar or a tie. Just because your son's difficulties with a collar and tie are not physical, but are sensory, does not mean that they are any less valid. Autism is classed as a disability and accommodations for its effects should be as automatic as they are for any physical disability. I think that you should make the school aware of the problems your son is having with the uniform, and your very reasonable safety concerns about his wearing a tie overnight. I would also add some information about how real sensory issues are for autistic people and that your son cannot just stop his behaviour and that it is not a whim. They will then know the full facts and the burden of coming up with a reasonable compromise is then theirs.

Children
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