"He's shouting so loud but nobody's hearing him": A multi-informant study of autistic pupils' experiences of school non-attendance and exclusion.

IF 2.5 Q1 EDUCATION, SPECIAL Autism and Developmental Language Impairments Pub Date : 2023-10-18 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1177/23969415231207816
Laura Gray, Vivian Hill, Elizabeth Pellicano
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Abstract

Background and aims: Children and young people on the autism spectrum frequently report a range of negative educational experiences and face disproportionally high rates of school non-attendance, including school avoidance and permanent exclusion, which can have a significant impact on their well-being as well as educational and broader life outcomes. To date, few studies have examined the full range of proximal (child, parent/family, school levels) and distal (community and society levels) barriers to ensuring the school attendance and the inclusion of autistic pupils. The current study sought to do just that by examining autistic young peoples' school non-attendance and exclusion experiences from the perspectives of multiple informants.

Methods: We recruited 12 autistic pupils, who had previously experienced school avoidance and/or exclusion, from one local authority in England, United Kingdom. We conducted semi-structured interviews with the young people themselves, ten of their parents, eight of their current teachers and nine local authority professionals, including six educational psychologists and three specialist autism teachers. We analyzed interviewees' responses using reflexive thematic analysis.

Results: Interviewees gave overwhelmingly negative accounts of autistic pupils' school non-attendance and exclusion experiences. Our analysis identified a range of school-related factors they felt led to, or exacerbated, negative experiences in their former mainstream schools, and which ultimately led to their or their children's school non-attendance. It also went further to identify distal factors, including fragmented educational experiences, parents "fighting" against a complex bureaucratic system to secure appropriate education for their children, and limited professional involvement.

Conclusions: Our findings emphasize the importance of examining the broader context in which autistic pupils are embedded and demonstrate that such pupils are able to successfully attend-and even enjoy-school when they receive the appropriate care and support.

Implications: Schools and local authority professionals should seek to work in partnership with parents and autistic pupils to secure the necessary support for their inclusion in mainstream education. Government policy should support the provision of sufficient local authority professionals to adopt a more proactive approach to mitigate autistic pupils' avoidance of and exclusion from school.

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“他喊得很大声,但没有人听到”:一项针对自闭症学生不上学和被排斥经历的多信息研究。
背景和目的:自闭症谱系的儿童和年轻人经常报告一系列负面的教育经历,并面临着不成比例的高失学率,包括逃学和永久排斥,这可能对他们的幸福感以及教育和更广泛的生活结果产生重大影响。迄今为止,很少有研究对确保自闭症学生入学和融入社会的近端(儿童、家长/家庭、学校层面)和远端(社区和社会层面)障碍进行全面调查。目前的研究试图通过从多个信息来源的角度调查自闭症年轻人的失学和排斥经历来做到这一点。方法:我们从英国英格兰的一个地方当局招募了12名自闭症学生,他们以前曾经历过学校回避和/或排斥。我们对这些年轻人自己、他们的十位父母、他们现在的八位老师和九位地方当局的专业人士进行了半结构化的采访,其中包括六位教育心理学家和三位自闭症专家老师。我们使用反射性主题分析法分析了受访者的回答。结果:受访者对自闭症学生的旷课和被排斥经历给出了绝大多数负面的描述。我们的分析确定了一系列与学校相关的因素,他们认为这些因素导致或加剧了他们在前主流学校的负面经历,并最终导致他们或他们的孩子不上学。它还进一步确定了远端因素,包括分散的教育经历、父母为确保孩子接受适当教育而与复杂的官僚系统“斗争”,以及有限的专业参与。结论:我们的研究结果强调了研究自闭症学生所处的更广泛背景的重要性,并证明了当这些学生得到适当的照顾和支持时,他们能够成功上学,甚至享受学校的乐趣。影响:学校和地方当局的专业人员应寻求与家长和自闭症学生合作,确保他们融入主流教育所需的支持。政府政策应支持提供足够的地方当局专业人员,以采取更积极主动的方法,减轻自闭症学生逃避和被排斥在学校之外的情况。
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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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