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Stakeholder Perceptions of the Effects of a Public School-Based Theatre Program for Children with ASD
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Stakeholder Perceptions of the Effects of a Public School-Based Theatre Program for Children with ASD

Thalia Goldstein, Matthew Lerner, Sarah Paterson, Lena Jaeggi, Tamara Toub, Kathy Hirsh-Pasek and Roberta Golinkoff
Journal for learning through the arts, v 15(1)
07 Sep 2019
url
https://doi.org/10.21977/D915136948View
Published, Version of Record (VoR) Open

Abstract

Autism Children with disabilities Stakeholders Theater
Arts programs are often credited with helping children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) gain cognitive and social skills. As with all claims of transfer from experience in the arts to abilities in non-arts domains, empirical evidence is mixed, and often criticized for both imprecise methodologies and a lack of connection back to the art form itself. Exact measurement of programs’ mechanisms and effects are rare. To investigate the effect of theatre experiences for children with ASD, we completed a systematic study of adult stakeholders of a large, school-based, successful musical theatre program. We found stakeholders emphasized modeling, routines, and relaxation as useful strategies, endorsing that the program built imitation, motor abilities and turn-taking skills. These observations raise questions for standard theories of the effects of arts that focus and accentuate only higher order social and emotional or academic skills, and emphasize the importance of including stakeholders in theorizing and measuring the effects of arts programs for all populations.

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