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Using ‘I am’ Digital Stories to facilitate autistic young people to have a voice in their transition to adulthood

Using ‘I am’ Digital Stories to facilitate autistic young people to have a voice in their transition to adulthood
Using ‘I am’ Digital Stories to facilitate autistic young people to have a voice in their transition to adulthood
The voices of autistic young people are frequently excluded from transition planning and decision-making, especially when they have more complex needs and may not use speech to communicate. The aim of this research, based at a residential special school in England, was to extend and evaluate the use of the ‘I am’ Digital Stories methodology. ‘I am’ Digital Stories are short (c.3-5 minutes) videos that use a strengths-based framework to support the sharing of voice, experiences, and preferences in visual form. ‘I am’ Digital Stories is an accessible and inclusive methodology that enables young people to present their ‘best selves’ to people in new settings who are meeting them for the first time. Digital Stories were co-created with and/or for three young adults aged 18-19, their families and the school, and shared with stakeholders as part of the transition to post-school contexts. Reflexive thematic analysis of data from 17 semi-structured interviews with stakeholders resulted in five themes: benefits of Digital Stories; humanising approach; ownerships and agency; ethical considerations; and direct impact on practice. Stakeholders highlighted how powerful the ‘I am’ Digital Stories were for gaining a fuller, more humanising understanding of the young person that was unavailable or impossible via other sources.
autism, Digital Stories, participatory, co-construction, voice, transition
1471-3802
Lewis-Dagnell, Stephanie
ec3e7f0a-b2f4-417e-b3cc-bc16028b82c5
Burden, Louisa
0fed5848-52ac-48ac-b06f-de56fdb8e25f
Marsden, Kirsty
a049384d-9d60-4e48-b959-7deba3a8d4b6
Parsons, Sarah
5af3382f-cda3-489c-a336-9604f3c04d7d
Kovshoff, Hanna
82c321ee-d151-40c5-8dde-281af59f2142
Lewis-Dagnell, Stephanie
ec3e7f0a-b2f4-417e-b3cc-bc16028b82c5
Burden, Louisa
0fed5848-52ac-48ac-b06f-de56fdb8e25f
Marsden, Kirsty
a049384d-9d60-4e48-b959-7deba3a8d4b6
Parsons, Sarah
5af3382f-cda3-489c-a336-9604f3c04d7d
Kovshoff, Hanna
82c321ee-d151-40c5-8dde-281af59f2142

Lewis-Dagnell, Stephanie, Burden, Louisa, Marsden, Kirsty, Parsons, Sarah and Kovshoff, Hanna (2023) Using ‘I am’ Digital Stories to facilitate autistic young people to have a voice in their transition to adulthood. Journal of Research in Special Educational Needs. (In Press)

Record type: Article

Abstract

The voices of autistic young people are frequently excluded from transition planning and decision-making, especially when they have more complex needs and may not use speech to communicate. The aim of this research, based at a residential special school in England, was to extend and evaluate the use of the ‘I am’ Digital Stories methodology. ‘I am’ Digital Stories are short (c.3-5 minutes) videos that use a strengths-based framework to support the sharing of voice, experiences, and preferences in visual form. ‘I am’ Digital Stories is an accessible and inclusive methodology that enables young people to present their ‘best selves’ to people in new settings who are meeting them for the first time. Digital Stories were co-created with and/or for three young adults aged 18-19, their families and the school, and shared with stakeholders as part of the transition to post-school contexts. Reflexive thematic analysis of data from 17 semi-structured interviews with stakeholders resulted in five themes: benefits of Digital Stories; humanising approach; ownerships and agency; ethical considerations; and direct impact on practice. Stakeholders highlighted how powerful the ‘I am’ Digital Stories were for gaining a fuller, more humanising understanding of the young person that was unavailable or impossible via other sources.

Text
Digital Stories for transitions for JORSEN MAIN NAMES_Revised_CleanCopy - Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 26 July 2025.
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 26 July 2023
Keywords: autism, Digital Stories, participatory, co-construction, voice, transition

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480413
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480413
ISSN: 1471-3802
PURE UUID: d8a2e789-51bc-4416-ad25-2b8f86d14a8f
ORCID for Sarah Parsons: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2542-4745
ORCID for Hanna Kovshoff: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-6041-0376

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 02 Aug 2023 16:30
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 03:17

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Contributors

Author: Stephanie Lewis-Dagnell
Author: Louisa Burden
Author: Kirsty Marsden
Author: Sarah Parsons ORCID iD
Author: Hanna Kovshoff ORCID iD

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