Autism & Developmental

Growing-up autistic: Sharing autistic children's experiences and insights.

Mullally et al. (2026) · Autism : the international journal of research and practice 2026
★ The Verdict

Autistic kids feel safe at home but 83% feel unsafe at school—listen, believe, and redesign classrooms to reduce overwhelm and victimisation.

✓ Read this if BCBAs working with autistic learners in any school setting.
✗ Skip if Clinicians who only serve adults or home-based programs.

01Research in Context

01

What this study did

Manning et al. (2026) asked autistic children where they feel safe and why.

Kids spoke in small groups and one-on-one. They named places, people, and moments that felt good or scary.

No tests, no drills—just listening.

02

What they found

Home won. Kids said “my room,” “my dog,” “mum gets me.”

School lost. Teachers, noisy halls, and classmates who mock them made 83% feel unsafe.

Masking and bullying showed up every day.

03

How this fits with other research

Zakai-Mashiach (2025) followed older autistic teens who said the same thing—school felt worst in early years. The new child voices prove the trouble starts young.

Pearson et al. (2023) and Gibbs et al. (2023) let adults speak. They still carry scars from school bullying and still mask to stay safe. The feeling does not fade with age.

Bertschy et al. (2020) surveyed high-schoolers who wanted “more care” from staff. L et al. show younger kids need that care right now, not later.

Zablotsky et al. (2014) counted more bullying in regular classes. The children in L et al. tell us how that bullying feels—lonely, loud, endless.

04

Why it matters

If a child feels unsafe, learning stops. Use the child’s own words to spot triggers—bells, group work, certain peers. Add quiet corners, choice of seating, and staff who greet by name. Share the child’s safety plan with every adult on the team. When kids feel safe, they drop the mask and build real skills.

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Ask your learner to draw or name one place they feel safe at school—then add one matched support (headphones, desk move, buddy) before the next bell.

02At a glance

Intervention
not applicable
Design
qualitative
Sample size
136
Population
autism spectrum disorder
Finding
not reported

03Original abstract

There is a critical lack of exploration into the firsthand experiences of autistic children in the psychological literature. We sought to address this using baseline data from a wider mixed-methods study. A total of 136 autistic children (mean age = 10.35) completed an online questionnaire. Questions explored children's understanding of autism, their feelings about being autistic in different contexts and challenges experienced. Quantitative data revealed limited autism knowledge and understanding for some. Challenges included talking about being autistic and self-advocating for needs, especially with non-family members. Children generally recognised both strengths and challenges of being autistic, although concerns about feeling/being different were widespread, and masking common. Strikingly, although most children felt positive about being autistic at home, significantly fewer felt this to be true when around peers or teachers. Using reflexive thematic analysis, four main themes were developed: (1) overwhelming experiences, (2) unsafe people, (3) sanctuary and (4) autistic identity. Overall, the children felt safest at home with family and/or with autistic/neurodivergent/understanding friends, but most unsafe at school with their teachers and neurotypical peers, where victimisation was rife. These findings offer valuable insights into the lives of autistic children, and demand we explore how places of education can be transformed into safe spaces for autistic children.Lay abstractAutistic children are rarely asked directly about their own experiences. In this study, 136 autistic children (ages 8-14) shared their views through an online questionnaire. They were asked what being autistic means to them, how they feel about it and what challenges they face in different environments. Many said they knew little about autism, and most did not have the words to talk about being autistic or feel safe doing so. Talking was especially difficult outside the family; while over 60% felt comfortable with family, only 16.5% felt this way with other people. Children also told us how overwhelming everyday life can be. Noisy, crowded or unpredictable environments often caused distress or shutdown. Many described how strong emotions, especially anxiety, build up in these moments. Some lost the ability to speak, and tasks like decision-making or emotional regulation became especially hard and exhausting. School was often named as a major source of overwhelm. Children showed deep insight into the people around them. They were highly attuned to whether others, for example, friends, family, teachers or professionals, felt safe or unsafe. Feeling unsafe often meant being misunderstood, ignored or bullied. School peers were commonly described as sources of victimisation, and teachers as making children feel unsafe by not listening or misunderstanding their needs. When children did not trust those around them, they masked their autistic traits to avoid judgement. This came at a cost: many described exhaustion, loneliness or feeling like they had to hide who they really are. By contrast, home and trusted relationships, especially with neurodivergent family or friends, offered sanctuary. Children felt freer to be themselves, ask for what they need and talk about autism. Emergent positive autistic identities were evident in some children. These findings show autistic children are thoughtful, perceptive and deeply affected by their environments while simultaneously shining a bright light on the challenges growing up autistic in a neurotypical world. Their voices offer vital insights and a call to make schools and services safer, more respectful spaces.

Autism : the international journal of research and practice, 2026 · doi:10.1177/13623613261427795