ABSTRACT

This ground-breaking book gives an accessible overview and synthesis of current knowledge of relevance to the development of excellence in autism education. By situating understandings of autism within a ‘bio-psycho-social-insider’ framework, the book offers fresh insights and new ways of thinking that bring together global pedagogic practice, research, policy, and the insider perspective.

Guldberg critiques current notions of Evidence-Based Practice and suggests ways of bridging the research-practice gap. She explores the interrelationship between inclusive principles, distinctive group learning needs and the individual needs of the child or young person. Eight principles of good autism practice provide a helpful framework for how education settings and practitioners can adapt classroom environments and teaching so that autistic children and young people can thrive.

Written for anyone who wants to make a difference to the lives of autistic pupils, Developing Excellence in Autism Practice provides practitioners and students on education courses with tools for best practices, and shows how to draw on these to implement true positive change in the classroom.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

part I|98 pages

Current evidence and knowledge from different domains in autism studies

chapter 2|8 pages

The bio-psycho-social-insider model

chapter 4|15 pages

Contributions from psychology

chapter 5|13 pages

Learning from autistic perspectives

chapter 6|17 pages

Contributions from the social sciences

chapter 7|19 pages

Evidence-informed practice

part II|82 pages

Inclusive practice and distinctive pedagogies for autistic pupils

chapter 8|13 pages

Inclusion and inclusive pedagogy

chapter 11|13 pages

Professional development

chapter 12|11 pages

The scholarly practitioner