Autism & Challenging
Behaviours in Children
Challenging Behaviours and Autism
Children with autism often display challenging behaviours. These behaviours can serve as a potent source of stress and frustration amongst the children themselves, as well as parents and caregivers.
While parents may feel accountable or guilty for these behaviours, it’s important to not blame yourself or your child. These behaviours can be treated and managed.
What is Autism?
Before we dive into understanding some of the behaviours of children with autism, it’s important for us to first understand what Autism actually is.
Autism, or autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a complex developmental condition. Children with autism often suffer from challenges in social communication and interactions. The level of impairment varies significantly among individuals. This is why autism is considered to be a spectrum condition.
Signs of autism usually surface around the age of 2 or 3, though some developmental delays could be observed and be diagnosed even as early as 18 months.
Some common signs of autism can include:
- Deficits in social communication and interaction across multiple settings, such as:
- Aversion to maintaining eye contact with others
- Does not respond to name when called
- Deficits in nonverbal communicative behaviors such as the limited use of non-verbal gestures or facial expressions
- Does not initiate social interactions or sustain a back-and-forth conversation with others
- Unable or uninterested in developing and maintaining social relationships
- Restricted and repetitive patterns of interests, activities, and behaviors, such as:
- Repetitive motor movements such as hand flapping, rocking one’s body back and forth, or spinning self in circles
- Persistent repetition of selected words and phrases (also known as echolalia)
- Insistence on playing with objects in a certain way every time or lining up toys in a fixed order and getting upset when order is changed
- Inflexible adherence to routines and rituals such as needing to eat, dress or leave the house, in the same way, every time, drinking only from particular cups or asking the same questions repeatedly, and requiring the same answer every time
- Restricted and obsessive interests, or an intense preoccupation with a narrow topic such as insects fighting
Common Challenging Behaviours for Autism
Now that we understand the signs and symptoms of Autism, we can then start to learn about the common challenging behaviours displayed by children with Autism.
Common challenging behaviours may include:
- Non-compliance or the refusal to follow rules and instructions – either actively or passively.
- Inappropriate behaviors that interrupt the flow of their surroundings or environment such as causing a disruption in class or interrupting a caregiver’s conversation with others. These behaviors can include crying, tearing things, throwing objects, or knocking things over etc.
- Obsessions, compulsions, and rituals which result in an inflexibility to adapt and cope with change and transitions.
- Tantrums or meltdowns refer to emotional outbursts that often include behaviors such as crying, screaming, or yelling. The child loses control of their emotions and might even experience difficulties calming down even when they have achieved their desired goal.
- Physical aggression include behaviours that are harmful to others such as kicking, biting, punching or hair-pulling etc.
- Self-injurious behaviour refers to behaviours that are harmful to self, which include head banging, hair pulling or wound picking etc.
- Sexual inappropriateness refers to a wide variety of behaviors including sexual touching or exposing of one’s genitals.
Understanding Behaviour
Behaviour is a form of communication. Given that many children with Autism face speech and language-related challenges, they are often unable to explicitly express their needs and wants to others. In this manner, challenging behaviours serve to be their way of communicating a desired outcome. Furthermore, children with Autism often face difficulties and stressors in other areas of life, which can result in stress and frustration perpetuating these challenging behaviours.
It’s important for us to first understand the “why” of a behaviour in order to formulate an effective plan to manage it.
Challenging behaviors do four main things:
- They seek attention
- The child behaves in a way to seek the attention of others. The child might not understand the difference between positive (e.g., compliment) and negative (e.g., scolding) attention. Therefore, the child might engage in behaviours such as hitting siblings or throwing objects to receive negative attention from caregivers.
- They seek access
- The child wants access to a toy, or a preferred activity and the child learns that the challenging behaviour (e.g., having a tantrum) would help them obtain what they want.
- They seek to escape
- The child wants to avoid or escape from a task or activity and the child learns that the challenging behavior (e.g., deliberately urinating in pants during worktime) would help them escape.
- They seek to feel good
- The child engages in feel-good behaviors that are self-soothing, such as flapping hands or rocking themselves back and forth etc.
Tip For Caregivers
The best way to teach a child to be mindful is to be mindful of yourself.
When you drink a cup of tea, do you enjoy the experience of its smell and its flavour? Or do you drink it in a hurry while texting and feeding the dog?
Be there, wherever you are.
How to start?
You can make mindfulness a game to play.
Try the following:
Safe place visualization: Invite your child to mind travel to a safe place. You both close your eyes and go there with your mind. Describe to each other everything you are feeling while being there. Is it warm? Windy? Are you comfortable? Are you happy?
Children can learn to count on this resource whenever they feel anxious. They will learn that they can go to their safe place and feel grounded just by closing their eyes.
Gratitude before bed: When in bed, ask your child to name three things of the day that they feel grateful for. No matter how hard the day was, it’s important to really think about the things that went well. It could be as simple as gratitude for the sunshine, or for having a roof to sleep under.
The Antecedent Behavior Consequence Model
Now that we’ve gotten a high-level understanding of some of the behaviours associated with autism, it’s time to go a little deeper.
It’s important for us to understand that challenging behaviors are situated in a context, and we cannot create successful intervention plans if we do not understand the context in which the behavior is situated in. Psychologists use the Antecedent Behavior Consequence Model (The ABC Model), which is a behavioral modification strategy.
Antecedent – the action, event or condition that triggers the onset of the behavior, for instance, the presence of a teacher or hearing the word “no”
Behavior – the child’s response to the antecedent, such as crying or hitting of self
Consequence – the response of others following the child’s behavior, which could be giving in to the child or ignoring the child etc.
Behavior is often learned and maintained by the events that happened prior to and after the behavior. Therefore, changing the antecedent or the consequence of the behavior could effectively help to manage or eliminate the behavior entirely.
Here are some questions for you to consider when it comes to challenging behaviors:
- Is this a sudden behavior?
- Is my child trying to escape from something?
- Is my child feeling anxious or frustrated?
- What does my child gain from exhibiting this behavior?
- Is this behavior consistent and on-going?
- If so, does it happen only in certain situations or with specific people?
- What are the reactions of myself and others to my child’s behavior?
- What is my child trying to tell me?
- Is there something in the surroundings or environment that is bothering my child?
- Does my child feel calmer and more regulated after exhibiting the behavior?