Participation in Social Activities among Adolescents with an Autism Spectrum Disorder

December 9, 2011 by  
Filed under Research

There’s a new study out this month on socialization in teens with ASD by Paul T. Shattuck, Gael I. Orsmond, Mary Wagner, and Benjamin P. Cooper:

Background

Little is known about patterns of participation in social activities among adolescents with an autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The objectives were to report nationally representative (U.S.) estimates of participation in social activities among adolescents with an ASD, to compare these estimates to other groups of adolescents with disabilities, and examine correlates of limited social participation.

Methods and Findings

We analyzed data from wave 1 of the National Longitudinal Transition Study 2, a large cohort study of adolescents enrolled in special education. Three comparison groups included adolescents with learning disabilities, mental retardation, and speech/language impairments. Adolescents with an ASD were significantly more likely never to see friends out of school (43.3%), never to get called by friends (54.4%), and never to be invited to social activities (50.4%) when compared with adolescents from all the other groups. Correlates of limited social participation included low family income and having impairments in conversational ability, social communication, and functional cognitive skills.

Conclusions

Compared with prior research, our study significantly expands inquiry in this area by broadening the range of social participation indicators examined, increasing the external validity of findings, focusing on the under-studied developmental stage of adolescence, and taking an ecological approach that included many potential correlates of social participation. There were notable differences in social participation by income, a dimension of social context seldom examined in research on ASDs.

The complete research report is available as a free resource online, here (pdf).

Having done a first reading of it, it confirmed my guess that a lot of the significant social impairment they noted was limited to those with more severe communication deficits and lower IQs. Indeed, their overall findings are likely to somewhat overestimate the extent of socialization problems in teens with an ASD because their sample was drawn from those who are classified for special education under the Autism category. As many of us know, students who are high-functioning (e.g., students with Asperger’s Disorder) are often not categorized under the Autism category and are categorized under “Other Health Impairment” or some other category. That said, if your child has severe communication deficits and an IQ <85, these results are likely to be applicable. Not surprisingly, perhaps, families with greater financial resources have children who participate in more social activities.

When thinking about why teens with ASD engage in less socialization outside of school, one factor that I want to mention here is that there are likely fewer opportunities in communities for youth with ASD than for youth with other challenges. As part of advocacy efforts, parents can help their children by working with community agencies to create more opportunities for socialization. Stuck for ideas? Try contacting the child psychiatry department at a large hospital and ask them if they will work with you to create some programs. And try contacting the special education program at a nearby university and see if you can get their staff and students to work with you creating a camp or outings or other opportunities for socialization.

As parents, we tend to spend a vast amount of our energy on dealing with schools and doctors/therapists, but there is much to be done in the community. When my son was young, I routinely went to camps I had picked out for him and arranged to train all the staff so that they could understand him and so that he could attend a regular camp. It was a wonderful experience for him and the camps would subsequently be more available to other children with similar problems.

As one of the overheads Sherry Pruitt and I use in our workshops says: Everything in Life is Social. If your child’s life outside of school is not providing enough socialization opportunities, network with other parents and reach out to agencies and programs in your area to see what you can develop. If your child needs it, there are probably at least 10 other children around who need it, too.

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