Print Email Facebook Twitter School participation of autistic youths Title School participation of autistic youths: The influence of youth, family and school factors Author Li, B. (TU Delft Design Conceptualization and Communication; Universiteit Leiden) Heyne, David (Deakin University) Scheeren, Anke (Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam) Blijd-Hoogewys, Els (INTER-PSY; Rijksuniversiteit Groningen) Rieffe, Carolien (Universiteit Leiden; University of Twente; University College London) Date 2024 Abstract Many autistic youths experience restricted school participation. The present study investigated the influences of youth, family and school factors on autistic youths’ school participation. Parents of 200 Dutch autistic youths (age range: 4–16 years, Mage = 12.23 years, SDage = 2.93 years) filled in questionnaires in a national survey for autistic individuals, reporting the school participation, age and autistic traits of their child, parents’ education level and self-efficacy for supporting their child’s schoolwork, and the impact of problems their child experienced with the physical and social environments of the school. Multivariate linear regression analysis using imputed data revealed that among the six predictor variables, only the impact of problems autistic youths experienced with the physical environment of school was negatively associated with their school participation. This study provided support for the essential role of the school environment in predicting autistic youths’ school participation, indicating that problematic aspects in the school environment could have a greater impact on autistic youths’ school participation than youth factors or family factors. This highlights the need to create a more accommodating environment at school, where autistic youths can participate easily and comfortably. Lay abstract: School-aged youths have a basic human right to participate in educational and recreational activities at school. Yet, autistic youths are at high risk of being excluded from school and from school-based activities. It is important to understand how this occurs, to ensure that all autistic youths have opportunities to participate in school activities that are equal to the opportunities of their non-autistic peers. The present study investigated multiple influences on the school participation of autistic youths, including youth factors (age and autistic traits), family factors (parent education level and parental self-efficacy for supporting their child’s schoolwork) and school factors (the impact of problems autistic youths experienced with the physical and social environments of school). Using an online survey, we gathered the views and experiences of the parents of 200 autistic youths aged between 4 and 16 years, in the Netherlands. We found that among the factors, only the impact of problems that autistic youths experienced with the physical environment of school was associated with their school participation. In particular, autistic youths who experienced greater difficulties with the physical environment of school had lower levels of school participation. Our findings highlight the pressing need to modify school environments to better accommodate the needs of autistic youths so that they can participate easily and comfortably. Subject autistic traitsautistic youthphysical environmentschool participationsocial environment To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:e56707db-7f4f-4000-826d-81d3da05caa9 DOI https://doi.org/10.1177/13623613231225490 ISSN 1362-3613 Source Autism Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type journal article Rights © 2024 B. Li, David Heyne, Anke Scheeren, Els Blijd-Hoogewys, Carolien Rieffe Files PDF li-et-al-2024-school-part ... actors.pdf 485.21 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:e56707db-7f4f-4000-826d-81d3da05caa9/datastream/OBJ/view