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International review of the evidence on best practice in educational provision for children on the autism spectrum

International review of the evidence on best practice in educational provision for children on the autism spectrum
International review of the evidence on best practice in educational provision for children on the autism spectrum
There is considerable debate regarding the most appropriate and effective ways of supporting the learning of children and young people on the autism spectrum. This international review provides a synthesis of empirical research and expert evidence (dated 2002-2008) to identify best practice in educational provision for these children. Five bibliographic databases were systematically searched using clearly defined key words, and abstracts assessed according to explicit inclusion and exclusion criteria; 92 research papers which focused on children and young people were included. Expert evidence was drawn from policy documents and government strategies, or research reports, from the UK and Ireland. Findings show that there is insufficiently strong evidence regarding the effectiveness of one type of intervention approach compared to another. A range of educational provision should be maintained in order to cater appropriately for a wide diversity of need. Interventions most often researched were those involving intensive behavioural techniques and some studies showed these can be successful in teaching specific skills to some children. There was limited evidence regarding the needs of older children as well as consideration of educational provision more widely, including the effects of type of setting (as distinct from a specific type of intervention or learning approach). More research is needed on other types of educational interventions currently used by parents and in schools as well as greater collaboration between researchers and practitioners to establish what works best for children and young people on the autism spectrum.
0885-6257
47-63
Parsons, S.
5af3382f-cda3-489c-a336-9604f3c04d7d
Guldberg, K
56874a71-324b-4684-976c-79dbf5c3af0f
MacLeod, A
3f52d0c4-e4aa-4f80-bc9a-7a68c273c8ca
Jones, G
35e34a91-70c9-438a-931b-603a0a9f6ece
Prunty, A
69b5288a-0aad-487e-898f-97af650d682b
Balfe, T
4ebe43d9-fb62-4651-bf86-6adbaac23898
Parsons, S.
5af3382f-cda3-489c-a336-9604f3c04d7d
Guldberg, K
56874a71-324b-4684-976c-79dbf5c3af0f
MacLeod, A
3f52d0c4-e4aa-4f80-bc9a-7a68c273c8ca
Jones, G
35e34a91-70c9-438a-931b-603a0a9f6ece
Prunty, A
69b5288a-0aad-487e-898f-97af650d682b
Balfe, T
4ebe43d9-fb62-4651-bf86-6adbaac23898

Parsons, S., Guldberg, K, MacLeod, A, Jones, G, Prunty, A and Balfe, T (2011) International review of the evidence on best practice in educational provision for children on the autism spectrum. European Journal of Special Needs Education, 26 (1), 47-63. (doi:10.1080/08856257.2011.543532).

Record type: Article

Abstract

There is considerable debate regarding the most appropriate and effective ways of supporting the learning of children and young people on the autism spectrum. This international review provides a synthesis of empirical research and expert evidence (dated 2002-2008) to identify best practice in educational provision for these children. Five bibliographic databases were systematically searched using clearly defined key words, and abstracts assessed according to explicit inclusion and exclusion criteria; 92 research papers which focused on children and young people were included. Expert evidence was drawn from policy documents and government strategies, or research reports, from the UK and Ireland. Findings show that there is insufficiently strong evidence regarding the effectiveness of one type of intervention approach compared to another. A range of educational provision should be maintained in order to cater appropriately for a wide diversity of need. Interventions most often researched were those involving intensive behavioural techniques and some studies showed these can be successful in teaching specific skills to some children. There was limited evidence regarding the needs of older children as well as consideration of educational provision more widely, including the effects of type of setting (as distinct from a specific type of intervention or learning approach). More research is needed on other types of educational interventions currently used by parents and in schools as well as greater collaboration between researchers and practitioners to establish what works best for children and young people on the autism spectrum.

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Autism_Review_paper_for_EJSNE_special_issue_FINAL.docx - Author's Original
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Published date: February 2011
Organisations: Social Justice & Inclusive Education

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 170357
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/170357
ISSN: 0885-6257
PURE UUID: b4da8c21-ee7c-4a12-b8a4-a3e5ad101ca4
ORCID for S. Parsons: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2542-4745

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Date deposited: 05 Jan 2011 16:37
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 02:56

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Contributors

Author: S. Parsons ORCID iD
Author: K Guldberg
Author: A MacLeod
Author: G Jones
Author: A Prunty
Author: T Balfe

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