Principals key to inclusive education for autistic children

Director of Griffith University’s Autism Centre of Excellence thinks school Principals should lead the way in adopting a whole-school approach to the education of all students, including those with autism and other disabilities.
Jun 30, 2017

Principals should lead the way in adopting a whole-school approach to the education of all students, including those with autism and other disabilities.

According to autism expert Prof Jacqueline Roberts, Director of Griffith University’s Autism Centre of Excellence, it is essential for principals to ensure teachers are satisfactorily trained about autism and spread that knowledge throughout the school.

“For the vast majority of children with disabilities including children with autism, mainstream education remains the best setting for them,"Roberts said.

“That’s where they are going to learn the skills that will enable them to participate in society, to have jobs, to learn how to engage and mix with other people.”

While some children with disabilities may need a more specialist setting, autism educators hoped mainstream schools would become better at providing programs for these children without taking time away from other children in the classes.

Roberts said there was also a need for how the environment can be managed to make it easier for kids with autism to actually function in the environment.

“We know for example, that children with autism often have sensory issues that make the actual physical environment of school really hard, because of lighting or the noise and those things can be managed."

A whole school approach would also help prevent bullying of children with autism.

“Children with autism have some specific problems with the social aspects of school. They don’t read that, they don’t get that so they tend to be the targets of bullying by other kids so we also need programs to address that."