Teachers’ Attitudes toward Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Autism Spectrum Disorder: Prevalence and Inclusion in Mainstream Schools
1.2. Teachers’ Attitudes toward the Inclusion of Children with ASD
1.3. Variables That Influence Teachers’ Attitudes toward the Inclusion of Children with ASD
1.3.1. Teachers’ Knowledge and Attitudes toward ASD
1.3.2. Teachers’ Training and Attitudes toward ASD
1.3.3. Teachers’ Experience and Attitudes toward ASD
1.3.4. Teachers’ Self-Efficacy and Attitudes toward ASD
1.3.5. Culture and Teachers’ Attitudes toward ASD
1.3.6. Teachers’ Gender and Attitudes toward ASD
1.4. Methods and Instruments Used to Assess Teachers’ Attitudes toward ASD
1.5. Interventions to Improve Teachers’ Attitudes toward the Inclusion of Children with ASD
1.6. Previous Systematic Reviews regarding Teachers’ Attitudes toward the Inclusion of Students with ASD
1.7. Purpose of the Study
- To conduct a systematic review of studies based on teachers’ attitudes toward the inclusion of students with ASD.
- To analyze the variables that possibly influence teachers’ attitudes regarding the inclusion of children with ASD in the mainstream school environment.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Procedures
2.2. Selection Procedures: Eligibility and Exclusion Criteria
- Only empirical studies that assess pre- and/or in-service teachers’ attitudes toward the inclusion of students with ASD (including autism and Asperger’s diagnoses).
- Only educational professionals, specifically teachers (from any stage and specialization).
- From 2015 to 2020, in English.
- Articles involving other diagnoses apart from ASD.
- Participants are neither pre- nor in-service teachers.
- Other types of publications that are not scientific articles published in peer review journals (therefore, other types of publications were excluded).
- Purely descriptive or theoretical articles that did not provide empirical data on the subject of the review.
2.3. Data Collection Process and Data Items
3. Results
3.1. Teachers’ Attitudes toward the Inclusion of Children with ASD
3.2. General Information Regarding the Reviewed Studies
3.3. Teachers’ Attitudes of ASD and Methods and Instruments Used for Assessment
4. Discussion
4.1. Variables That Influence Teachers’ Attitudes toward the Inclusion of Children with ASD
4.1.1. Teachers’ Attitudes toward ASD and Knowledge
4.1.2. Teachers’ Attitudes toward ASD and Training
4.1.3. Teachers’ Attitudes toward ASD and Experience
4.1.4. Teachers’ Attitudes toward ASD and Self-Efficacy
4.1.5. Teachers’ Attitudes toward ASD and Culture
4.1.6. Teachers’ Attitudes toward ASD and Gender
4.2. Limitations
4.3. Future Lines of Research
4.4. Practical Implications
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Sample | Instrument | Results and Conclusions |
---|---|---|---|
[71] (2015) USA | n = 234 in-service teachers (ECT and PST); REG = 68%; SET = 32%; A: 37; G: 76% females and 24% males; n.m.i. | Survey to assess teacher’s attitudes regarding children with ASD [72]. It consists of seven statements and uses a Likert-type scale; α = 0.77. | Teachers’ attitudes were more negative toward the students with ASD than toward the other students (t = 15.70, p < 0.001). REG showed more negative attitudes toward the students with ASD than SET (2.59 vs. 2.14; t = 6.43, p < 0.001). Gender (female: t = −2.63, p < 0.01), holding a special education certification (t = −4.83, p < 0.001), and teaching at an elementary grade level (t = 2.16, p = 0.03) were significant predictors to get inclusive practices. |
[73] (2015) Greece | n = 228 in-service teachers (118 PST, 67 ST and 93 special, inclusive of multicultural and special vocational teachers); G: 166 females and 62 males; A: 36.4% are in the age range of 31–40 years and 35.5% in the age range of 41–50 years; EXP: 28.1%; CON: 22.8% at least one student with ASD; TR: 36.4%. | Questionnaire ad hoc. It measures teachers’ views and attitudes regarding ASD and consists of 21 questions. | Most of the teachers considered specific ASD characteristics as barriers, while intellectual disability is not valued as a negative aspect. Only 83 out of 228 teachers held that inclusive education can help children with ASD. Past training, education, and experience on ASD contribute to possessing positive attitudes toward ASD. Furthermore, teachers (69.7%) believe that ASD students can participate in secondary education or, alternatively, in technical and vocational education. |
[74] (2016) Saudi Arabia and United States | n = 185 in-service teachers; USA: n = 42 (ECT: 16.3%; PST: 41.9%; MST: 11.6%; HT: 23.3%; others: 7%); REG: 55.8%; SET: 11.6%; other: 32.6%; A: 43% are in the age range of 36–45 years; G: 73.8% females and 26.2% males; EXP: 100%; CONT (dis): 97.7%. Saudi Arabia: n = 137 (ECT: 9.2%; PST: 43.7%; MST: 17.6%; HT: 16.2%; others: 13.4%); REG: 46.4%; SET: 29.3%; p: 4.3%; PSY: 5%; others: 15%; A: 65% are in the age range of 20–25 years; G: 62.6% females and 37.45% males; EXP: 94.3%; CONT (dis): 63.6% | Autism Attitude Scale for Teachers (AAST) [75]. It measures the attitudes of teachers toward children with ASD. In addition, it consists of 14 questions and uses a 5-point Likert-type scale where 1 indicates “strongly disagree and 5 indicates “strongly agree”; α = 0.789. Moreover, it was translated into Arabic. | A statistically significant difference was found between the USA and Saudi Arabia on the full survey scale. Teachers from the USA had more positive attitudes toward inclusion than the Saudi Arabian participants. In fact, Arabian teachers present negative attitudes toward the inclusion in mainstream classrooms of children with ASD. This difference is probably due to a lack of awareness, training, and cultural attitudes toward stigmatization in Saudi Arabia. Therefore, Arabian teachers have reservations regarding the inclusion of children with SEN in their regular classrooms, which may be rooted in sociocultural variables. Regarding specialization, REG and SET did not have differences toward children with ASD. |
[76] (2016) United States | n = 82 in-service teachers (secondary teachers from grades 9 to 12); REG: 61%; SET: 39%; EXP: all of them with experience in teaching children with ASD; n.m.i. | Adaptation of Scale of Teachers’ Attitudes toward Inclusive Classrooms (STATIC, [77]). It measures the attitudes of secondary REG and SET toward children with ASD. In addition, it consists of 20 statements and uses a Likert-type scale. | There were no significant differences among the REG and SET results (54.39 vs. 56.47). In total t (79) = −0.88, p = 0.38. They all had positive attitudes toward the inclusion of children with ASD in mainstream settings, probably since training, experience, and knowledge provide them with the necessary skills to work effectively with ASD. |
[78] (2016) China | n = 471 in-service teachers; ECT: 99% are female and 1% are males; A: 58.4% are in the age range of 20–34 years; n.m.i. | Self-administered questionnaire. It measures the attitudes toward the care and education of children with ASD. In addition, it consists of 10 items and uses a 5-point Likert-type scale where 1 indicates “strongly disagree” and 5 indicates “strongly agree”. It was an adaptation from the survey by the authors of [79]. | Eighty-three percent provided inaccurate responses to more than half of the questionnaire items that assess the knowledge of ASD. Attitudes regarding ASD were on average fairly neutral or slightly favored improving education for children with ASD. Moreover, 72–73% of the teachers felt strongly about the need for government funding for teachers’ training in SEN. |
[80] (2018) Malaysia | n = 264 pre-service teachers; G: 86.4% female and 13.6% male; A: 24 year-olds and below Study 1 n = 151 (pre-service SET): 68 at Year 1, 48 at Year 2, 35 at Year 3. Study 2 n = 181 (year 1 pre-service teachers in different specializations): 83 at sciences, 30 English education, and 68 at SET. | AAST [76]; α = 0.71. The attitudinal survey was conducted in two parts: Study 1 and Study 2. | The pre-service SET presented less positive attitudes toward the inclusion of children with ASD than the pre-service REG at other specializations. Societal attitudes and the Malaysian teacher training model influence pre-service teachers’ attitudes toward inclusive education for children with ASD. Study 1: There were significant differences in attitudes toward inclusion between Year 1 to 3; SET: F(2) = 5.036, p < 0.01. Training stimulates positive changes in pre-service teachers’ attitudes toward inclusion. Study 2: There were no significant differences in the attitudes toward educational inclusion: F(2) = 1.501, p = 0.226. Although SET pre-service teachers reported a more positive attitude toward the inclusion of children with ASD. |
[81] (2019) Australia | n = 107 in-service teachers REG: 89%; SET: 10%; p: 1%; A: 31% are in the age range of 20–30 years; 30% are 31–40 years; 26% 41–50 years; 13% +50 years; G: 98% females and 2% males; EXP: 95% with more than a year of experience; n.m.i. | Adaptation of AAST [75]; α = 0.90. | Attitudes toward the inclusion of students with ASD were highly positive. The Australian PST obtained similar scores to their American Northwest counterparts (28.96 vs. 28.39, the first time and 28.55 vs. 32.81, the second time). There is a low correlation between the levels of training and years of specific experience and teachers’ attitudes toward the inclusion of students with ASD. |
[82] (2019) China | n = 211 pre-service PE teachers from two PE teacher education programs of 5 years to complete their training. From Year 1: 42, Year 2: 42, Year 3: 50, Year 4: 39, and Year 5: 38. A: 18–26 years old (M: 20.83, SD: 1.84; G: 45% females and 55% males. | A three-item scale was used to evaluate the attitudes toward including students with ASD [83]. It measures physical educators’ attitudes toward including students with ASD. In addition, it was translated into Chinese; α = 0.87. | The attitude scores were 4.45 out of 7 (0.95). Mindfulness and basic psychological needs satisfaction positively predicted and have a moderate effect on physical educators’ attitudes toward ASD. The negative teaching experiences might be attributed to the lack of quality training in SEN PE. When PE teachers’ basic psychological needs are satisfied, they will feel more confident. |
[84] (2019) Indonesia | n = 245 in-service teachers; PST in inclusive schools; n.m.i. | Survey. Descriptive statistics are used to analyze data by describing the collected data. | Participants showed positive attitudes toward students with ASD. Teachers are good at understanding the characteristics of students with ASD and they have a good emotional response to the existence of students with ASD in the classroom. Teachers already have an excellent response to the academic aspects, social aspects, and emotional aspects of the students with ASD in their class. |
[85] (2019) Turquía | n = 193 pre-service teachers; ECT attending third and fourth grade participated in the study; G: 174 females and 19 males (there is no more information regarding the involved sample); n.m.i. | Attitude Toward the Inclusion of Autistic Children [86]. It assesses the experience, knowledge, attitudes, and current practices of educational professionals related to the inclusion of students with ASD. In addition, it consists of 19 items, and uses a 7-point Likert-type scale from “I agree absolutely” to “not absolutely”; α = 0.86. | Participants were wrong in six out of 15 items. Pre-service teachers’ attitudes toward children with ASD were examined in relation to certain demographic variables (grade, previous EXP with children with ASD, and taking a course about special education). Teachers’ attitudes toward children with ASD did not differ significantly based on these variables. The only significant relationship was found between the ECT attitudes and prior training on ASD. |
[87] (2020) USA | n = 508 pre-service teachers in 1st (21.7%), 2nd (35.2%), 3rd (30.7%), and 4th degree year (12.2%); G: 80.9% females and 19.1% males; EXP with SEN: 20%; CONT (internship, 88% and volunteer experience in special education school settings, 20%). | Adaptation of AAST [75]. | For pre-service teachers, the coursework on ASD seemed to be negative for attitudes. However, the pre-service teacher internship and volunteer experiences have an impact on their attitudes toward the inclusion of ASD in a positive way. Pre-service teachers who had taken coursework on ASD showed a negative notion of full inclusion and were in favor of partial and self-contained classroom settings for students with ASD. |
[88] (2020) Ireland | n = 78 in-service teachers (PST); G: 62 females and 12 males (4 n.d.); A: >18 years old; EXP: Teaching a child with ASD in a mainstream classroom; TR: Most of them have a module in SEN and degrees in training or initial teacher training. Some teachers completed a postgraduate training in SEN or had participated in short-term courses. | Impact of Inclusion Questionnaire (IIQ, [89]). It measures the impact of inclusion on the child with ASD in the school or classroom environment. In addition, it consists of 24 items and uses a 7-point Likert-type scale, where 1 indicates ‘very strongly agree’ and 7 indicates ‘very strongly disagree’; α = 0.92. | Half of the participants had negative attitudes toward the inclusion of children with ASD in mainstream education. Thirty-six percent held neutral attitudes and only 10% viewed inclusion positively. The gender and number of years of teaching experience did not influence teachers’ attitudes toward inclusion of children with ASD. Training in SEN and/or inclusion did not influence teachers’ attitudes toward the inclusion of children with ASD. Teachers who believed they had the adequate resources to make inclusion possible had significantly more positive attitudes than teachers who did not believe that. |
[90] (2020) Sweden, Finland, and England | n = 704 pre-service teachers (262 Swedish, 251 Finnish, and 191 English); PST and SET. G: 579 females and 120 males (five did not state their gender). A: 19–55 years old; n.m.i. | Ad hoc survey. It measures the cognitive, affective, and behavioral components of attitudes and uses a 9-point Likert-type scale. In addition, it rates how participants felt toward people with ASD on a series of bipolar adjective pairs “positive–negative”, “friendly–hostile”, “trusting–suspicious”, “contempt–respectful” (adapted from [91]); α = 0.86. | Positive contact predicted positive attitudes. English teachers showed more positive attitudes than the other two groups. In England, pre-service teachers were encouraged to have contact with pupils with special educational needs including ASD, and to perform volunteer work. This was uncommon in Sweden and Finland. The authors of this study considered that Swedish and Finnish teacher training programs should adopt the English model to promote contact opportunities. |
[92] (2020) Malaysia | n = 87 in-service teachers SET; G: 69.0% females and 31% males; A: 25–34 years old (58.6%); EXP in mainstream classrooms: 86.1%; EXP in special education classroom: 24.1%; training in ASD: 47.1% | AAST [75]; α = 0.91. The survey was translated into Malay, apart from the English version. | Malaysian SET had less positive attitudes toward the inclusion of children with ASD compared to the American and Swedish teachers, since societal attitudes have a strong predictive power on their attitudes toward inclusive education for students with ASD (3.48 vs. 4.06 and 3.72, respectively). Knowledge is related to self-competence to embrace children with ASD. Female teachers were found to have a more positive attitude toward ASD than male teachers. |
[93] (2020) China | n = 386 in-service teachers; G: 78.6% females and 21.4% males; A: 37.5% of the participants are less than 30 years and 27.1% of the participants are between 40 and 49 years old; CONT with ASD: 42.2%; n.m.i. | AAST [75]; α = 0.70. | Participants had a moderately positive attitude toward children with ASD (mean of 3.20). Attitudes are related to knowledge and professional self-efficacy: Participants with a poor attitude tend to give up when they have little knowledge, and low levels of self-efficacy. |
[94] (2020) China | n = 65 pre-service teachers (ECT); G: 84.6% females and 15.4% males. A: mean age of 21.18 (SD = 1.80) experimental group (n = 33) and control group (n = 32). TR: 0.85; SD: 1.42 (experimental groups) and TR: 0.88; SD: 1.29 (control group) CONT and EXP: n = 30 | A three-item scale was used to evaluate the attitudes toward including students with ASD [83]; α = 0.75 (baseline) and α = 0.91 (post-test). The survey was translated into Chinese. | Mindfulness meditation did not improve the pre-service teachers’ attitudes, but only their basic psychological needs satisfaction. |
Study | Country | Sample | Stage | Specialization | Occupation | Other Variables | Instrument |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Negative (n = 1) | |||||||
[88] | Ireland | 78 | PST | REG and SET | In-service | Gender, experience, and training | Questionnaire |
Neutral (n = 6) | |||||||
[73] | Greece | 228 | PST, ST, and other professionals * | REG and SET | In-service | Training and Experience | Questionnaire |
[78] | China | 471 | ECT | - | In-service | Knowledge and training | Questionnaire |
[82] | China | 211 | PE PST | REG | Pre-service | BSN and dispositional mindfulness | Survey |
[85] | Turkey | 193 | ECT | - | Pre-service | Experience and training | Questionnaire |
[92] | Malaysia | 87 | Mainstream and special education classroom | SET | In-service | Knowledge and gender | Questionnaire |
[93] | China | 386 | - | - | In-service | Knowledge and self-efficacy | Questionnaire |
[73,78,82,85,92,93] n = 6 | Greece, China (3), Turkey, and Malaysia | 1576 | ECT, PST, ST, PE PST, and other professionals * | REG and SET | Pre- and In- service | Knowledge, training, experience, self-efficacy, gender, BSN, and dispositional mindfulness | Questionnaire (5) and Survey |
Positive (n = 4) | |||||||
[71] | USA | 234 | ECT, PST | REG and SET | In-service | Stage and gender | Questionnaire |
[76] | USA | 82 | ST | REG and SET | In-service | Training | Questionnaire |
[81] | Australia | 107 | - | REG and SET | In-service | Training and experience | Questionnaire |
[84] | Indonesia | 245 | PST | Inclusive school | In-service | - | Questionnaire |
[71,76,81,84] n = 4 | USA (2), Australia, Indonesia | 668 | ECT, PST, ST | REG, SET, and teachers from an inclusive school | In-service | Training, experience, stage, and gender | Questionnaire |
Study | Countries | Occupation | Attitudes | Variables | Instrument |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
[74] | Saudi Arabia and United States | In-service ECT, PST, MST, HT | USA > Saudi Arabia | Training and culture | Questionnaire |
[90] | Sweden, Finland and England | Pre-service PST and SET | England > Sweden and Finland | Contact and culture | Survey |
Study | Intervention | Occupation | Variables | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|
[80] | Training at University | Pre-service | Training | Special education pre-service teachers were less in favor of the total inclusion of students with ASD in the mainstream, when compared with the non-special education pre-service teachers. |
[87] | Coursework on ASD | Pre-service teachers | Experience | Pre-service teachers who had taken one or more credit courses on autism did not agree with full inclusion (direct effect), but if they perceived the necessity for special education, their resistance to full inclusion diminished (indirect effect). |
[94] | Mindfulness | Pre-service | Needs satisfaction Age Gender | The mindfulness meditation did not improve pre-service teachers’ attitudes toward inclusive education, only their basic psychological needs satisfaction. Therefore, mindfulness had an indirect effect on attitudes through needs satisfaction. |
Instruments | Study |
---|---|
ATIAC | [85] |
AAST | [74,80,81,87,92,93] |
STATIC | [76] |
Beamer and Yun [83] | [82,94] |
Harnum, Duffy, and Ferguson [72] | [71] |
Others | [73,78,84,90] |
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Gómez-Marí, I.; Sanz-Cervera, P.; Tárraga-Mínguez, R. Teachers’ Attitudes toward Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Systematic Review. Educ. Sci. 2022, 12, 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12020138
Gómez-Marí I, Sanz-Cervera P, Tárraga-Mínguez R. Teachers’ Attitudes toward Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Systematic Review. Education Sciences. 2022; 12(2):138. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12020138
Chicago/Turabian StyleGómez-Marí, Irene, Pilar Sanz-Cervera, and Raúl Tárraga-Mínguez. 2022. "Teachers’ Attitudes toward Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Systematic Review" Education Sciences 12, no. 2: 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12020138
APA StyleGómez-Marí, I., Sanz-Cervera, P., & Tárraga-Mínguez, R. (2022). Teachers’ Attitudes toward Autism Spectrum Disorder: A Systematic Review. Education Sciences, 12(2), 138. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12020138