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The authors of the article 'Autistic Self-Advocacy and the Neurodiversity Movement' propose four future directions for autism intervention research and practice: (1) establishing partnerships with autistic people, caregivers, and stakeholders on research steering and advisory boards; (2) requiring intervention researchers and practitioners to reflect on how their practices align with a neurodiversity framework and the views of autistic people; (3) increasing regard within intervention programs for natural autistic developmental processes, coping strategies, autonomy, and well-being; and (4) increasing efforts to develop and validate tools to measure autistic-prioritized outcomes and the goodness-of-fit between an autistic individual and their environment.
Authors
Sources
- Autistic Self-Advocacy and the Neurodiversity Movement - Frontiers www.frontiersin.org via serper
Referenced by nodes (5)
- autonomy concept
- neurodiversity paradigm concept
- autism interventions concept
- Autistic Self-Advocacy and the Neurodiversity Movement concept
- well-being concept