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Saturday, September 3, 2016

The Verbal Abuse of Autistic Children: A Silent Social Problem

(Originally posted for The Voice of Heard on April 28, 2012)

As most people familiar with autism already know, the developmental disorder makes self-expression for children and adults affected by autism difficult at best and impossible at worst. That aspect of the disability alone makes them susceptible to a social problem that would go unnoticed by their families and friends: verbal abuse. I bring up this fact because two days ago, I read an article in the Telegram and Gazette about how an autistic 10-year-old boy has been going through verbal abuse at his New Jersey school and how his father found out about it by placing a hidden tape recorder on him upon receiving reports of outbursts and physical violence against teachers. Though the recordings, the father learned how members of the school’s staff were calling his son names like “bastard,” “tard,” “a hippo in a ballerina suit,” and “little dog.” Just today, I read that a teacher was placed on paid leave by the school upon learning of the probe. Legal and privacy issues aside, I find this treatment against a child who can’t express the problem on his own to be revolting. In my opinion as an autistic individual, the teachers responsible for this abuse seem to consider children like him to be sub-human. According to the article, there have been at least nine other incidents across the US since 2003 in which verbal abuse against autistic children at school. Those were only officially reported cases. Now I’m not trying to raise a panic among parents here, but I wonder if there are other such incidents that are going unreported due in part to the fact that autistic children have difficulty expressing themselves, especially when it comes to them being mistreated by other people.

Original Comment



John Heard
April 29th, 2012 at 5:50 pm 
Tim, Well written, thoughtful.



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