Litcius/Paper detail

Autism Symptoms, Executive Functioning and Academic Progress in Higher Education Students

Renée Dijkhuis, Leo de Sonneville, Tim Ziermans, Wouter Staal, Hanna Swaab

2020Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders69 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Many students with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) attending higher education drop out prematurely. The predictive value of self-reported daily executive functioning (EF) and (cognitive) performance-based EF (mental flexibility and working memory) for academic progress was evaluated in 54 young adults with ASD (M age = 22.5, SD = 2.4, 72% male). Regression analyses showed that autism symptom severity explained 12% of variance in academic progress, which was raised to 36% by adding self-reported daily EF, and to 25% by adding performance-based EF. It is suggested that EF is a candidate marker for academic progress in higher education students with ASD and a candidate target for early intervention.

Topics & Concepts

AutismPsychologyCognitive flexibilityAutism spectrum disorderSpecial educationWorking memoryClinical psychologyExecutive functionsCognitionAcademic achievementIntervention (counseling)Executive dysfunctionHigh-functioning autismDevelopmental psychologyPsychiatryNeuropsychologyPedagogyAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchAttention Deficit Hyperactivity DisorderChild Development and Digital Technology