Bias: Difference between revisions
From ActuallyAutistic Wiki
Fire Eider (talk | contribs) (Created page with "At first, autism was studied in only white male kids and it was believed for a long time that girls couldn't have it. This is at least in part because autism often looks different in girls (as well as, often, POC), due to stronger pressures to fit in. Category:Stubs") |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Stub}} | |||
At first, autism was studied in only white male kids and it was believed for a long time that girls couldn't have it. This is at least in part because autism often looks different in girls (as well as, often, POC), due to stronger pressures to [[Masking|fit in]]. | At first, autism was studied in only white male kids and it was believed for a long time that girls couldn't have it. This is at least in part because autism often looks different in girls (as well as, often, POC), due to stronger pressures to [[Masking|fit in]]. | ||
{{Template:MainstreamResearch}} | |||
[[Category:Stubs]] | [[Category:Stubs]] |
Latest revision as of 08:22, 17 October 2022
This page or section is a stub. Perhaps you can help add something to it? 😊
At first, autism was studied in only white male kids and it was believed for a long time that girls couldn't have it. This is at least in part because autism often looks different in girls (as well as, often, POC), due to stronger pressures to fit in.
[v d e] Autism 'Research' and 'Therapy' |
---|
Autism Speaks - Autism stereotypes - Bias - Deficit model - Functioning labels - Ethics of autism research - History of autism - Pathology paradigm - Stigma - Applied behavior analysis - Violence against Autistic people |