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The social experiences and sense of belonging in adolescent females with autism in mainstream school

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posted on 2025-08-01, 00:35 authored by O Myles, C Boyle, A Richards
Aim(s) This qualitative study explored the social experiences and sense of belonging of adolescent females with autism in mainstream schooling. Method/Rationale The research explored the views of eight adolescent females with autism. Semi-structured interviews were used to explore the ways in which they experience a sense of belonging and exclusion in school, and what they feel would support them socially. Findings The findings suggest that key friendships, understanding and perceived social competence are important for adolescent females with autism in developing a sense of belonging in mainstream school. Adolescent females with autism are motivated to form a sense of belonging in school, but experience pressure to adapt their behaviour and minimise their differences in order to gain acceptance. Limitations This study represents a small sample of adolescent females with autism. Further replication is needed before the findings can be generalised to other females with autism in mainstream school. Conclusions The current study addressed an identified gap in the literature by seeking the first-hand views and experiences of adolescent females with autism in mainstream school. Consistent with prior research, the findings suggest that adolescent females with autism are motivated to seek social contact and form friendships in the same way as females without a diagnosis of autism. The findings also highlight the specific social difficulties experienced by females with autism and the way in which this can add to their feelings of exclusion in the school environment.

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© 2019 British Psychological Society

Notes

This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the British Psychological Society via the DOI in this record

Journal

Educational and Child Psychology

Publisher

British Psychological Society

Version

  • Accepted Manuscript

Language

en

FCD date

2019-05-18T11:21:09Z

FOA date

2019-05-20T08:43:05Z

Citation

Vol. 36 (4), pp. 8-21

Department

  • School of Education

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