Abstract

Autistic students are more likely to drop out of university, while facing both challenges and opportunities within university environments. This study compared the experiences of autistic and non-autistic current United Kingdom students, in terms of thoughts about dropping out, burnout, mental health and coping, during the COVID-19 pandemic. Burnout was of particular interest as this is a relatively unexamined phenomenon for autistic students. Seventy autistic and 315 non-autistic students, completed a mixed methods questionnaire with standardized measures of burnout (personal and academic), mental health (depression, stress, and anxiety), and coping styles (adaptive and maladaptive). We also included qualitative questions about dropping out and COVID-19 experiences. We found autistic participants experienced higher rates of burnout and mental health symptoms and were more likely to have thought about dropping out. Reasons given for thinking about dropping out, for both groups, focused on poor mental well-being, doubts about university, and academic challenges. For autistic participants, further analyses did not identify specific predictors of thinking about dropping out, but for non-autistic participants, this was predicted by maladaptive coping styles and academic burnout. Academic and personal burnout predicted one another for autistic students, and age, maladaptive coping, autistic characteristics, stress, and anxiety additionally predicted burnout for non-autistic students. Similarities in experiences during the pandemic were noted, with both groups experiencing negative social implications, difficulties adjusting to emergency online learning, and poorer psychological well-being. Moving forward from COVID-19, universities must find ways to enhance both academic and social support, to enable equal opportunity within Higher Education for autistic students.

Highlights

  • Sue Fletcher-Watson, University of Edinburgh, Specialty section: This article was submitted to Educational Psychology, a section of the journal

  • As we compared the experiences of autistic and non-autistic students, a standardized measure of burnout was used rather than an autistic-specific measure [which has only recently been in development (Raymaker et al, 2020)]. We considered both academic burnout and personal burnout [i.e., burnout outside of university demands – how physically and psychologically exhausted someone is in general (Kristensen et al, 2005)]

  • As there is limited research on burnout for autistic people, our study adds further evidence concerning this phenomenon among autistic students and we suggest this should be an area of high priority for further research

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Summary

Introduction

Sue Fletcher-Watson, University of Edinburgh, Specialty section: This article was submitted to Educational Psychology, a section of the journal. This study compared the experiences of autistic and non-autistic current United Kingdom students, in terms of thoughts about dropping out, burnout, mental health and coping, during the COVID-19 pandemic. Seventy autistic and 315 non-autistic students, completed a mixed methods questionnaire with standardized measures of burnout (personal and academic), mental health (depression, stress, and anxiety), and coping styles (adaptive and maladaptive). We found autistic participants experienced higher rates of burnout and mental health symptoms and were more likely to have thought about dropping out. Further analyses did not identify specific predictors of thinking about dropping out, but for non-autistic participants, this was predicted by maladaptive coping styles and academic burnout. COVID-19, universities must find ways to enhance both academic and social support, to enable equal opportunity within Higher Education for autistic students

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