Anger over UK
professor's claims that unruly behaviour,
including autism, 'is being falsely
attributed to medical syndromes'
LONDON, UK: Unruly behaviour by many children is being falsely
attributed to medical complaints and
syndromes when better parenting is needed, a
leading academic has claimed.
Priscilla Alderson, professor of Childhood
Studies at London University, said that
syndromes such as attention deficit disorder
and mild autism were being exploited by
psychologists keen to "make a quick buck."
The number of children registered with
special needs in the United Kingdom has
doubled in a decade to 1.4million.
Professor Alderson told The Times
newspaper "I visited a special school which
had 27 children diagnosed as autistic. Of
those, only two that I met displayed the
lack of eye contact and absence of empathy
which denotes true autism. Money is behind
all this. Pyschologists want the work, and
lower the diagnosis threshold accordingly.
Special needs is an administrative device
describing children who have extra needs
from those provided for in the average
classroom.
Her conclusions will provoke fury among
psychologists and the parents of affected
children, who have spent years fighting for
recognition of a range of behavioural
problems.
Hugh Morgan, chief executive of the Welsh
national organisation, Autism Cymru,
expressed "surprise and dismay at what
appear, on the surface, to be misguided and
ill-informed comments."
Britain's National Autistic Society said
that questioning the diagnoses would add to
the "stress and confusion" suffered by many
families.
The number of children registered with
special needs has almost doubled over the
past decade to 1.4 million - an increase
from 11.6 per cent to 19.2 per cent in
primary schools and from 9.6 per cent to
16.5 per cent in secondary schools. The term
encompasses learning difficulties, such as
dyslexia, to various syndromes on the autism
spectrum.
Professor Alderson was backed by Eamonn
O’Kane, leader of the National Association
of Schoolmasters and Union of Woman
Teachers, who said that members were cynical
about an explosion in the number of
special-needs diagnoses and called for more
support for teachers facing bad behaviour.
Professor Alderson said that it was often
convenient for neglectful parents to claim
that a child had a behavioural disorder. She
believes that much of the increase can be
put down to more flexible interpretations of
normal childhood traits, such as
restlessness and excitability. In our more
gullible age, she says, this becomes
attention deficit - which could be solved by
engaging more with children and allowing
them to let off steam in traditional fashion
by playing in parks and climbing trees.
"Playgrounds and parks are empty, because
of the scare stories about abductions," she
said. "But children need the space and
freedom to play, run and climb - without
that, they are restless, and come to be seen
as abnormally ‘hyperactive.'
"About eight children are murdered
outside the home each year, compared with
about 50 inside. Cooping up children inside
homes is not going to do them any good."
Professor Alderson, 57, who has three
grown-up children and three grandchildren,
admitted that her eldest daughter had been
"difficult," something she attributes to her
naivity at the time about how to be a good
parent. "By the time my other children came
along, I had realised that, if you treat
children as adults, then they will behave
accordingly."
Teachers have complained about the growth
in the syndromes, alleging that it gives
pupils an excuse to avoid discipline. They
are also suspicious about the number of
children who are able to use a diagnosis to
claim more time in their examinations. For a
fee of £50, an educational psychologist or
specialist teacher can attest that a child
should claim at least 25 per cent extra time
because they have behavioural or learning
disorders.
Almost 37,000 11-year-olds were given
extra time in their national test in English
last year - up by 8,000, or more than 35 per
cent, in two years. Similar increases were
seen in maths and science tests.
Barry Bourne, an educational
psychologist, who has worked with children
for 35 years, rejected the claims that his
profession was exploiting labels to make
money.
"In the past, I think we had a very crude
view of some of these disorders," he said.
"It is a very complicated issue. I think we
have a much better understanding of what
aspects make up a personality than we did
when I first joined the profession.
Personally, I am convinced that family
history plays a far more significant part
than we believed in the past, and while
surroundings and upbringing are also
important alone they simply do not explain
why certain people from the same family
develop in very different ways."
O’Kane, general secretary of the
second-largest teaching union, said: "A lot
of teachers are very cynical about the
reasons behind the boom in the numbers of
these conditions. We need to do more to
address the consequences for staff who have
to deal with the bad behaviour."
An internet chatroom used anonymously by
teachers reveals the beliefs of many members
of the profession. One posting, left this
month by a teacher identified only as "re",
complained about students who "are whipped
off to a psychologist and labelled if they
show the slightest sign of misbehaviour."
It goes on: "This ‘diagnosis’ then
becomes an excuse for more misbehaviour - we
have students with ‘mild Tourette's’ and
lots of ADHD - and yet they can behave well
if threatened with punishment."
Someone calling herself Miss Nomer
responds: "Writing as a special-needs
teacher, I am quite sure that a lot of it is
complete b. I get sick of being trashed by
some little s who then tells me I can’t
punish him because his pill hasn’t kicked in
yet. When you give a kid a syndrome, you
give him an excuse."
She blamed "uppity parents looking for
compensation, extra funding, a stick to beat
teacher and an excuse for their kid’s
obnoxious behaviour and their inadequate
parenting."
Eileen Hopkins, a director of the
National Autistic Society, said: "This can
only add to the stress and confusion that
many families face. The importance of
receiving a correct diagnosis cannot be
emphasised enough. Access to the most
appropriate education and support depends on
it. No reputable diagnostician is likely to
make an on-the-spot diagnosis. Our
experience is that diagnosis is still a
battle for many families. Teachers believe
the numbers of children with an autistic
spectrum disorder is on the increase."
(Source: The Times, July 28, 2003) |