How does degree of autism affect education?

This seems an excellent forum for gauging the experiences of young people on the spectrum, and their parents, where the impact of the autism is much more manageable.

Some people don't get diagnosed until late teens or early 20s. They get through a lot of bullying, segregation on academic or behavioural grounds but still emerge to be diagnosed with autism or aspergers. Some children are diagnosed as very mild early on but their school experience isn't necessarily a doddle.

The autistic spectrum is often portrayed as a continuum, but this isn't strictly accurate. The presence of different symtoms and manifestations varies widely in its effects on individuals. Someone can be deemed mild, when some aspects of their autism are still severe, but the majority are sufficiently mild to enable them to cope better.

In strategies to help children in education, is it always certain that the measures we adopt to help do not prevent environmental factors which, even if uncomfortable, go some way to modifying the overall experience.

Can we learn something from people on the spectrum deemed milder or manageable in terms of their experience of education?

It would be useful perhaps to hear from parents with children designated mildly affected whether the educational experience was comparably mild, or whether there were real hardships that "mild" didn't prepare them for?

Parents
  • There's a further element to this I learned about much later in life. The more positives you can add to the equation to balance out the negatives, the better the outcome both day-to-day and long term.

    The concessions Fish refers to, such as leaving class 5 minutes for break and having a safe place to eat are positives, and the more of these that can be created the better, especially so they are spread out across the time frame when stresses are built up.

    Besides my own experiences I regularly see this helping students on the spectrum. Meltdowns do seem to follow a build up of stresses rather than being specifically related to the events immediately preceding meltdown.

    What I observe and feel could ease matters is to resolve some of the contributory factors, such as any recurring causes of sensory overload or anxiety that congest the bottleneck (Digby Tantam's narrow bandwidth - in Can the World Afford Autistic Spectrum Disorder?).

    If some of the pressures could be eased the impact of the small frequent hurts asssociated with school bullying might be alleviated.

    It may be others can give feedback about this.

Reply
  • There's a further element to this I learned about much later in life. The more positives you can add to the equation to balance out the negatives, the better the outcome both day-to-day and long term.

    The concessions Fish refers to, such as leaving class 5 minutes for break and having a safe place to eat are positives, and the more of these that can be created the better, especially so they are spread out across the time frame when stresses are built up.

    Besides my own experiences I regularly see this helping students on the spectrum. Meltdowns do seem to follow a build up of stresses rather than being specifically related to the events immediately preceding meltdown.

    What I observe and feel could ease matters is to resolve some of the contributory factors, such as any recurring causes of sensory overload or anxiety that congest the bottleneck (Digby Tantam's narrow bandwidth - in Can the World Afford Autistic Spectrum Disorder?).

    If some of the pressures could be eased the impact of the small frequent hurts asssociated with school bullying might be alleviated.

    It may be others can give feedback about this.

Children
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