An unconventional path to greater social-communication skills and independence for an adolescent on the autism spectrum

IF 2.5 Q1 EDUCATION, SPECIAL Autism and Developmental Language Impairments Pub Date : 2018-10-01 DOI:10.1177/2396941518809611
D. Trembath, R. J. Bala, Joanne Tamblyn, Marleen F. Westerveld
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Abstract

Background In 2015, a father took his 14-year-old son who is on the autism spectrum on a six-month journey aimed to develop his son’s social-communication and independent living skills. The duo travelled across 10 countries, meeting people and practising these skills. This study examined their goals, motivations for, and outcomes of the journey. Method We used intrinsic case study methodology with mixed methods, including interviews with parents and professionals; analyses of filmed interactions between the son, his father and strangers during the journey; and descriptive analysis of parent-reported changes in their son’s participation at home, school and in the community using the Participation and Environment Measure – Children and Youth. Results Qualitative analysis of the interviews with parents and professionals revealed a set of insightful goals and motivations, focusing on creating an optimal environment for the son’s development. Parents reported increases in their son’s social-communication and independent living skills, but also unexpected changes in his perspective and self-belief. The former findings were consistent with those arising from video analysis, whereby social-pragmatic skills critical to good conversations (staying on topic, body position, eye contact) all increased over the course of the journey, while abrupt topic changes and conversational prompts reduced. Participation and inclusion across home, school and community settings all increased over the same period. Conclusion While this study makes no claims regarding causation, the findings indicate that the journey was associated with positive changes for the son and his parents, leading to greater expectations for, and progress towards, independence following the journey. Implications of the findings for supporting young people on the autism spectrum in regular community settings are discussed.
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对于自闭症谱系的青少年来说,这是一条提高社交技能和独立性的非常规途径
2015年,一位父亲带着他14岁的自闭症儿子进行了为期六个月的旅行,目的是培养儿子的社交和独立生活技能。两人走遍了10个国家,与人们见面并练习这些技巧。这项研究调查了他们的目标、动机和旅行的结果。方法本研究采用内在案例研究方法,包括对家长和专业人士的访谈;在旅途中,儿子、父亲和陌生人之间的互动分析;以及使用“参与和环境测量-儿童和青少年”对父母报告的儿子在家、学校和社区参与情况的变化进行描述性分析。结果对父母和专业人士的访谈进行定性分析,揭示了一系列深刻的目标和动机,重点是为儿子的发展创造最佳环境。父母们报告说,他们儿子的社交能力和独立生活能力有所提高,但他的观点和自信也发生了意想不到的变化。前一项研究结果与视频分析的结果一致,即社交实用技能(保持话题、身体姿势、眼神交流)在旅途中都有所提高,而突然的话题变化和对话提示则减少了。在同一时期,家庭、学校和社区环境中的参与和包容都有所增加。虽然这项研究没有提出因果关系,但研究结果表明,旅行与儿子和他的父母的积极变化有关,导致儿子对旅行后的独立有更大的期望,并朝着独立的方向发展。研究结果对在常规社区环境中支持自闭症谱系的年轻人的意义进行了讨论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Autism and Developmental Language Impairments
Autism and Developmental Language Impairments Psychology-Clinical Psychology
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
审稿时长
12 weeks
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