Better Social, Emotional Communication, Healthy Relationship and ASD Accommodation Skills: Emotional Intelligence (EQ) Training for Autistic People and ASD Accommodation Training for People Who Care
Subjects are enrolled in pairs. Pairs consist of an autistic adult age 18-36 and a non-autistic learning partner who has a relationship with the autistic adult, such as a parent. The autistic adult in each pair receives the first stage of Kairon's online leadership training consisting of emotional literacy and healthy relationship topics. The learning partner in each pair receives Kairon's autism accommodation training while encouraging and providing feedback to their paired autistic adult. After training, both people in each pair evaluate the trainings' impacts on themselves and on their partner. Specifically, each autistic adult evaluates both the effectiveness of the leadership training they received and the effectiveness of the autism accommodation training that their paired learning partner received. Each learning partner evaluates both the effectiveness of the autism accommodation training they received and the effectiveness of the leadership training that their paired autistic adult received.
• Generally healthy;
• With a community diagnosis of ASD from a licensed clinician, such as a developmental pediatrician, psychiatrist, clinical psychologist, or a neurologist. Below is a set of valid example criteria these professionals could use, but other instruments, tools or diagnostic techniques could be used:
• For example, meeting DSM-5 criteria for ASD based on a DSM-5 ASD symptom checklist (APA 2013); Meeting International Classification of Diseases (ICD-11) for ASD (code 6A02)(Kamp-Becker, 2024); or a score in the ASD range on the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule 2 (ADOS-20)(Lord et al., n.d.).
• Participants have:
• Sufficient linguistic capability and technology fluency and capability to participate in an all-online intervention and associated assessments; Their own computer hardware, software and internet connection to allow access to online training; Availability of a non-ASD parent, guardian or adult with a similarly strong and trusting relationship (learning partner) who, upon pre-enrollment interview, has sufficient linguistic capability and technology fluency and capability to participate in an all-online intervention and associated assessments and the willingness, time and energy to keep up with the coursework; Absence of a clinical anxiety diagnosis, such as \<70 score on the ASEBA ASR Anxiety Problems score (or equivalent) or not having sufficient anxiety to be clinically evaluated; Verbal IQ ≥ 90 from a community test or using the Self-Administered Verbal IQ Test (SA-VIQT)(Logos et al., n.d.; openpsychometrics.org, n.d.), which can be administered entirely online and has convergent validity with Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence - Second Edition (WASI-II)(Wechsler, n.d.); and Ability to provide consent in English as a primary language with an absence of cognitive impairment.
• Selected by an ASD adult enrolled in the study; Generally healthy; Without a diagnosis of ASD Sufficient linguistic capability and technology fluency and capability to participate in an all-online intervention and associated assessments; Their own computer hardware, software and internet connection to allow access to online training; Ability to provide consent in English as a primary language with an absence of cognitive impairment.