Author/Authors :
Lynda Lewis، نويسنده , , John Trushell and Pat Woods، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The aim of this study was to ascertain whether collaborative group work on
a computer, facilitated by an adult, could provide a means for a primary
schoolboy with Asperger’s Syndrome (AS)—moderately-highly affected in all
areas of the “triad of impairments”—to develop appropriate task-related
interactions with his peers. Data were gathered before, during, and after group
work sessions. A combination of interviews and questionnaires established
background data and concerns of parent and teachers. Sociometric testing of
classmates was used to determine social acceptance and friendship grouping
among the child’s immediate peer group. During the adult-facilitated ICT
sessions an interaction process schedule (IPS) was used to record interactions
of the three children involved. The results indicate moderate improvements in
the child’s ability to interact with his peers, both in social and task-related
contexts, as well as a raised social profile among his classmates in general.
Although this was a discrete setting, the findings are encouraging and this
strategy may be replicated in schools to support mainstream inclusion for
children with AS.