Bullying Among Youth with Autism Spectrum Disorders

Publication date

2017-11-15

Authors

Zweers, I.ISNI 0000000506113265
Scholte, Ron H. J.
Didden, Robert

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

Students with disabilities and/or autism spectrum disorders (ASD) are particularly vulnerable to be involved in bullying compared to their peers without ASD. Studies have found that students with ASD are at higher risk to be involved in bullying as a bully (i.e., perpetrator of bullying), a victim (i.e., victim of bullying), or bully-victim (i.e., both perpetrator and victim of bullying). However, due to the nature of their disability (e.g., difficulties in understanding others’ feelings and intentions, nonverbal behaviors, and nonliteral speech), it is unclear whether youth with ASD construe bullying and victimization in similar ways as typically developing youth. Researchers generally agree that bullying is characterized by three defining criteria – (1) negative actions, (2) carried out repeatedly and over time, (3) in an interpersonal relationship characterized by a power imbalance. Different forms of bullying exist: physical bullying (e.g., hitting, kicking, and damage to property), verbal bullying (e.g., name-calling, insulting, and making fun of another person), and relational bullying (e.g., exclusion, ignoring, and spreading rumors). More recent forms of bullying include cyberbullying (e.g., hurtful text messaging or emailing, and posting hurtful messages/objectionable content on websites and social networking sites).

Keywords

bullying, bullying prevention, Taverne

Citation

Schrooten, I, Scholte, R H J & Didden, R 2017, Bullying Among Youth with Autism Spectrum Disorders. in Handbook of Social Skills and Autism Spectrum Disorder : Assessment, Curricula, and Intervention. 1 edn, Autism and Child Psychopathology Series, Springer, Cham, Switzerland, pp. 45-61. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-62995-7_4