"My Autism Is My Own": Autistic Identity and Intersectionality in the School Context.

Shana R Cohen, Kohrissa Joseph, Sarah Levinson, Jan Blacher, Abbey Eisenhower
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Abstract

Background: School is an important context for identity development across childhood and adolescence. These formative experiences impact adulthood. Minimal research has examined first-person autistic perspectives of how school experiences shape autistic identity as well as other intersecting identities. In this study, we examined the school messages that autistic individuals received and how individuals engaged with these external messages to formulate their identities.

Methods: Ten U.S.-based autistic adolescents and adults ages 15-35 participated in qualitative interviews about their elementary through secondary school experiences, interactions with teachers and peers, and how these shaped their identities. Two interviewees also engaged in three follow-up interviews each for member checking and further data gathering. Using a critical constructivist approach informed by grounded theory, we coded interviews inductively. We ensured the trustworthiness of data through peer debriefing, reflexive journaling, memoing, and member checking.

Results: In the school context, autistic students received stigmatizing messages from teachers and peers regarding their autism. These messages varied in relation to students' other identities, including race and gender. Participants felt that, following autism disclosure, teachers viewed them narrowly through an autism lens. Participants actively resisted these negative messages from teachers and peers by reclaiming their autistic identity. They reframed and redefined their autistic identity, embraced their autism-related strengths, and actively made choices about how, when, and to whom to disclose their autism. Decisions around autism disclosure intersected with decisions to emphasize other identities such as race or mental health, especially when these identities were more visible or more acceptable to others.

Conclusions: The school context conveyed powerful, stigmatizing messages around autism. In response, autistic students actively reclaimed and shaped their identities to prioritize a positive, empowered sense of self. Findings show a need for educators to model positive perceptions of autism, build an inclusive school community, and advocate for autistic representation in schools to facilitate autism-affirming messages.

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“我的自闭症是我自己的”:学校背景下的自闭症身份和交叉性。
背景:学校是童年和青春期认同发展的重要环境。这些形成性的经历会影响成年期。很少有研究以第一人称的视角考察了学校经历如何塑造自闭症身份以及其他交叉身份。在这项研究中,我们研究了自闭症个体接收到的学校信息,以及个体如何利用这些外部信息来形成他们的身份。方法:10名年龄在15-35岁的美国自闭症青少年和成年人参与了关于他们的小学到中学经历、与老师和同龄人的互动以及这些如何塑造他们的身份的定性访谈。两位受访者还分别进行了三次后续访谈,以进行成员核查和进一步的数据收集。使用基于扎根理论的批判性建构主义方法,我们对访谈进行归纳编码。我们通过同行汇报、自反性日志记录、会议记录和成员检查来确保数据的可信度。结果:在学校环境中,自闭症学生收到来自老师和同伴关于他们自闭症的污名化信息。这些信息因学生的其他身份而异,包括种族和性别。参与者觉得,在揭露自闭症之后,老师们通过自闭症的视角狭隘地看待他们。参与者积极抵制这些来自老师和同伴的负面信息,重新找回自己的自闭症身份。他们重新定义了自己的自闭症身份,接受了自己与自闭症相关的优势,并积极选择如何、何时以及向谁透露自己的自闭症。关于披露自闭症的决定与强调其他身份(如种族或心理健康)的决定相互交叉,特别是当这些身份更明显或更容易被他人接受时。结论:学校环境传达了关于自闭症的强有力的、污名化的信息。作为回应,自闭症学生积极地恢复和塑造他们的身份,优先考虑积极的、有力量的自我意识。研究结果表明,教育工作者需要树立对自闭症的积极看法,建立一个包容性的学校社区,并倡导自闭症在学校的代表,以促进自闭症肯定的信息。
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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