Neurodiversity-affirming autism training for school staff: A scoping review

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Objective: This scoping review mapped the availability and content of neurodiversity-affirming autism training courses for school staff in the United Kingdom. Introduction: Autistic young people often report challenging experiences in mainstream schools, with limited teacher knowledge cited as a contributing factor. Although autism training for educators is important, access remains inconsistent, and it is unclear how far existing provision aligns with contemporary, neurodiversity-informed understandings of autism. Inclusion Criteria: The review included academic and grey literature describing training that explicitly reflected a neurodiversity-paradigm perspective. Only English language sources were eligible. Methods: The search strategy involved three stages. Stage 1 comprised database searches of APA PsycInfo, British Education Index, CINAHL, Web of Science, Teacher Reference Center, and Ovid Medline. Stage 2 used targeted keyword searches across Google, Google Scholar, EThOS, and ProQuest. Stage 3 involved email contact with content experts. Analysis included numerical analysis, deductive framework analysis, and inductive qualitative content analysis Results and Implications: Only a small proportion of training aligns with neurodiversity‑affirming principles, with most provision grounded in deficit‑based perspectives, or lacking conceptual clarity. This results in a difficult‑to‑navigate training landscape, further constrained by systemic barriers to inclusive practice. Co‑produced, research‑informed training, is required to improve school experiences for autistic pupils.

Article activity feed