A Major Flaw in College Autism Programs

A Major Flaw in College Autism Programs

by Michael John Carley

I currently run?New York University’s (NYU) Connections Program for Global Students with Autism. But I’m relatively new to higher education. I have a much longer history as a consultant, writer, and Executive Director, and back when my non-profits were engaging in the political battles of the autism world (2003-2013-ish), it was very hard to convince universities to come join us as allies. Whether it was battling Autism Speaks over the word “cure” or the ridiculous notion that we got our autism from vaccines, we advocates thought that our various campaigns provided a great opportunity for universities. The greater institutions could show that they were humanitarian, the faculty brainpower of colleges could be used for a good cause, and most of all, students would be given a real-life, progressive experience that they’d never forget. We reached out to accommodations departments, disability studies programs…

But we got silence. Not even responses saying, “no thanks.” Some near-Stalinist, isolationist culture was dictating that the stereotypical bubble of college life…must remain a bubble. It was everyone’s loss, and it temporarily discouraged me from ever working in higher education.

That’s a hump we seem to be over – at least in theory – as we now see colleges attempting “connections” and partnerships with entities outside their campuses that provide either social or employment opportunities for their spectrum students.

Another challenge loomed when colleges realized that the tuition money from spectrum students was just as good as anybody else’s, and our kids were smart, so why not recruit them in droves??? Well, they did that, but without addressing the social challenges of college; and so the experience for many students was a one-year disaster. Herein, we still lag, as all across the English-speaking world?autistic students are still dropping out at higher rates than neurotypical kids?and this is almost always due to colleges making mistakes at assessing what their autistic students truly need. And what about the?parents that appear to have done everything they were supposed to do to prepare their kids for college?…Even they are still getting calls to come get their kids and bring them home.

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I have autism. And a large part of my hidden agenda in running NYU’s program is to either shame, or inspire (I don’t care which), other universities to also hire autistics to run their programs for autistic students. I’ve always assumed that the reasons spectrumfolk have a better chance at success in running such programs were painfully obvious: Autistic students, like anybody else, want to feel the trust that someone “gets” them. We’ve certainly learned in other arenas of Diversity Equity and Inclusion (DEI) that, to use one blatant example, a program head of African descent will bring forth more reassurance, self-esteem, and stability to a student of African descent, than will what we used to call “the white savior” program head. Well, doesn’t this concept apply to every marginalized community?

It turns out that even I may have misunderstood the depth of challenges that agenda faces.

Recently, there was?an unfortunate article on college autism programs in the Chronicle of Higher Education?wherein the author described and documented the challenges autistic students face at Western Kentucky University’s autism program. The picture painted was almost entirely deficit-based. Student challenges were well reported and backed up by research, but the piece failed to speak to the intelligence and/or any postgraduate potential of these students (disclaimer: I was quoted herein, and had some polite but unproductive emails with the author after it was published).

I asked my NYU Connections students to read it and tell me what they thought, and those that read the piece didn’t like it at all – all noted how Western Kentucky had an emphasis on social skills classes, which often teaches spectrumfolk that our way of doing things is bad and the rest of the world’s way of doing things is “appropriate,” thereby insulting their core self-esteem. They also agreed that the article made them feel poorly (if not completely mis-) represented. One student, Rosie Lee, noticed the discrepancy that in the article “…it’d be nice if more autistic students had actually been asked about their experiences in college.”

When the author was interviewing me a few months before publication, she seemed noticeably uncomfortable with acknowledging any benefits with a person with autism running a program for autistic students. Only when the article came out did I realize why.

I know of only three other people with autism running a college program in the US for students with autism. One,?Sara Sanders Gardner, who runs Bellevue College’s Neurodiversity Navigators Program, was also interviewed for the Chronicle piece, and they too were not pleased with it. In response to the Chronicle piece, Sanders Gardner told me, “When given the opportunity to focus on autistic student strengths and address real social barriers and solutions, the author instead relied on the tired trope of ‘fixing the broken disabled student’ so they could ‘fit in.’”

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To continue reading, please go to the original article at Autism Spectrum News by clicking here.

Marci Shaffer

Senior Career Consultant and Job Search Coach | Neurodiversity and Mental Health Advocate | Empowering your career journey with strategic coaching and personalized support

2 年

Fantastic article, Michael John Carley! We need far more autistic leadership in our college autism programs! Yes! While we’re at it, we could equally benefit from having autistic disability specialists, as well. Lived experience and insight simply can’t be manufactured.

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