Supporting Autistic Pupils in Primary Schools in Ireland: Are Autism Special Classes a Model of Inclusion or Isolation?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Ireland’s Policy Response to Educational Provision for Autistic Students
1.2. Autism Special Class Provision: An Enduring Model of Inclusion or Isolation?
- What are the benefits of and challenges attributed to having an autism class in mainstream primary schools?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Qualitative Research
2.2. Sem-Structured Interviews
2.3. Sampling
2.4. Data Analysis
2.5. Trustworthiness of the Findings
3. Findings
- What are the benefits of and challenges attributed to having an autism special class in mainstream schools?
- School leadership is critical to support a collaborative schoolwide approach to inclusion of the autism special class, but principals need support to lead.
- Access to high-quality, autism-specific professional learning promotes learning for autistic students.
- Autism special classes represent models of integration rather than inclusion in Irish primary schools.
3.1. School Leadership Is Critical to Support a Collaborative Schoolwide Approach to Inclusion of the Autism Special Class, but School Leaders Need Support to Lead
‘if the Department [of Education] want to continue to present this model and I think that it’s a very good model, I think that they should spend much more time educating staff, giving greater guidance to management regarding specifications of rooms… and upskilling the staff as a whole on how to deal generally with children with autism because I don’t think that is being done’.(P2)
3.2. Access to High-Quality, Autism-Specific Professional Learning Promotes Learning for Autistic Students
3.3. Autism Special Classes Represent a Model of Integration Rather Than Inclusion in Irish Primary Schools
‘even though we shouldn’t be using the word unit […] even though Emma if you call it another name it still comes back’.(P1)
4. Discussion
5. Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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School Pseudonym | Teacher | Gender | School Area | School Type | Number of Teachers | Teacher Classification | Teacher Code |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Red School | Principal 1 | Male | Urban | Co-educational | 24 | Administrative | P1 |
Green School | Principal 2 | Male | Rural | Co-educational | 18 | Administrative | P2 |
Yellow School | Principal 3 | Female | Urban | Co-educational | 13 | Administrative | P3 |
Blue School | Principal 4 | Female | Rural | Co-educational | 14 | Administrative | P4 |
Red School | Mainstream Teacher 1 | Female | Urban | Co-educational | 24 | Mainstream-infants | M1 |
Green School | Mainstream Teacher 2 | Female | Rural | Co-educational | 18 | Mainstream-1st and 2nd | M2 |
Yellow School | Mainstream Teacher 3 | Female | Urban | Co-educational | 13 | Mainstream-infants | M3 |
Blue School | Mainstream Teacher 4 | Female | Rural | Co-educational | 14 | Mainstream-3rd and 4th | M4 |
Red School | Autism Class Teacher 1 | Female | Urban | Co-educational | 24 | Autism class (3–12 years) | ACT1 |
Green School | Autism Class Teacher 2 | Female | Rural | Co-educational | 18 | Junior Autism Class | ACT2 |
Yellow School | Autism Class Teacher 3 | Female | Urban | Co-educational | 13 | Middle Autism Class | ACT3 |
Blue School | Autism Class Teacher 4 | Male | Rural | Co-educational | 14 | Senior Autism Class | ACT4 |
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Sweeney, E.; Fitzgerald, J. Supporting Autistic Pupils in Primary Schools in Ireland: Are Autism Special Classes a Model of Inclusion or Isolation? Disabilities 2023, 3, 379-395. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities3030025
Sweeney E, Fitzgerald J. Supporting Autistic Pupils in Primary Schools in Ireland: Are Autism Special Classes a Model of Inclusion or Isolation? Disabilities. 2023; 3(3):379-395. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities3030025
Chicago/Turabian StyleSweeney, Emma, and Johanna Fitzgerald. 2023. "Supporting Autistic Pupils in Primary Schools in Ireland: Are Autism Special Classes a Model of Inclusion or Isolation?" Disabilities 3, no. 3: 379-395. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities3030025
APA StyleSweeney, E., & Fitzgerald, J. (2023). Supporting Autistic Pupils in Primary Schools in Ireland: Are Autism Special Classes a Model of Inclusion or Isolation? Disabilities, 3(3), 379-395. https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities3030025