bullying at school

The summer edition of Communication has an article on page 43 on bullying. I was rather shocked by this because it simply divided bullying into three main categories (physical, verbal and indirect) and then proceeded to offer advice for dealing with conventional bullying.

My perception of bullying where people on the spectrum are the victims is rather different from this. I wondered if other contributors felt the same way or disagreed.

In my perspective, people on the spectrum are usually bullied by people taking advantage of their vulnerabilities arising from autism - sensory overload, difficulty understanding social interaction and metaphorical or humorous remarks, special interests and manerisms that attract attention. I also perceive the bullying to involve a wider spectrum of individuals in a class, not just the usually identified bullies.

People on the spectrum may be seen as entertaining. Sensitivity to environment - sudden noise, people in close proximity, sudden movement, intimidatory atmosphere is enough to trigger considerable distress and possibly a meltdown. Other kids quickly realise that "pushing the right buttons" - mainipulating the vulnerabilities of people on the spectrum, could be managed as collective entertainment.

Being seen as different, not fitting in, having different interests, having unorthodox mannerisms, all make people on the spectrum more likely to be targeted. They may be hurt or disturbed by joking remarks or jibes that NT kids would recognise for what they were, but could cause great anxiety to someone on the spectrum.

I rather felt, from reading the Communication article, that it was as if people on the spectrum were just overly sensitive to conventional bullying and just needed to hear the conventional advice. But for someone with communication difficulties "fogging" and saying "No" can just add to the entertainment value as this would come over differently.

I was also concerned that after 50 years NAS seemed not to have grasped that bullying at school is one of the fundamental damaging experiences fior people on the spectrum, and this needs research, not platitudes.

Parents
  • Sorry Jim V mod, you got me on full flow pedantic there....

    The one source I've found that I can relate to is Nick Dubin's Asperger Syndrome & Bullying Strategies and Solutions (Jessica Kingsley Publishers 2007).

    All the same, the strategies and solutions are sometimes too dependant on general bullying procedures, which is strange because he addresses his own experiences and the experiences of others. This is why I think it needs more in-depth research.

    I wonder for example, to what extent books on living with As quoting individuals' experiences of bullying have been qualified by the writer's own perceptions of conventional bullying. We need to look at bullying in the context of AS vulnerabilities.

    p62 of Dubin covers some of these issues - exploiting weakness and fear magnified for individuals on the spectrum, in particular that we are "black and white thinkers". He takes a view of bullying as an "imbalance of power" which is a good way of looking at it. People on the spectrum aren't well equipped to counteract power - a point well made on your video by the individual who found himself pushed into master-slave type situations.  He also addresses the use of mentors and roll models.

    He has an interesting personal story about being tricked into being handcuffed to a swing and left there. The bullies played on his gullibility.

    He also gives examples of teacher bullying, which I suffered from gravely, particularly one rooky teacher who thought picking on me ingratiated himself with my peers. Wasn't he just cool - egging on the others to have a go at me, in the classroom......

Reply
  • Sorry Jim V mod, you got me on full flow pedantic there....

    The one source I've found that I can relate to is Nick Dubin's Asperger Syndrome & Bullying Strategies and Solutions (Jessica Kingsley Publishers 2007).

    All the same, the strategies and solutions are sometimes too dependant on general bullying procedures, which is strange because he addresses his own experiences and the experiences of others. This is why I think it needs more in-depth research.

    I wonder for example, to what extent books on living with As quoting individuals' experiences of bullying have been qualified by the writer's own perceptions of conventional bullying. We need to look at bullying in the context of AS vulnerabilities.

    p62 of Dubin covers some of these issues - exploiting weakness and fear magnified for individuals on the spectrum, in particular that we are "black and white thinkers". He takes a view of bullying as an "imbalance of power" which is a good way of looking at it. People on the spectrum aren't well equipped to counteract power - a point well made on your video by the individual who found himself pushed into master-slave type situations.  He also addresses the use of mentors and roll models.

    He has an interesting personal story about being tricked into being handcuffed to a swing and left there. The bullies played on his gullibility.

    He also gives examples of teacher bullying, which I suffered from gravely, particularly one rooky teacher who thought picking on me ingratiated himself with my peers. Wasn't he just cool - egging on the others to have a go at me, in the classroom......

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