University of Birmingham

School of Education

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COSPATIAL

Communication and Social Participation: Collaborative Technologies for Interaction And Learning

Poor social understanding and skills are defining diagnostic features of autism. A recent National Autistic Society survey in the UK reported that parents consider social skills training to be the area of greatest need in terms of educational provision for children with autism and the “single biggest gap in support” (Batten et al, 2006; p.21). It is essential, therefore, for research efforts to focus on social skills training within educational provision to support individuals in maximising their skills and potential.

The COSPATIAL project aims to contribute to this broad aim by developing specific interactive technologies for school settings that may help to promote learning and understanding of social skills. The project will focus on the use of two main types of technologies: Collaborative Virtual Environments and Shared Active Surfaces. Their development will be guided by the theoretical framework of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT), which defines social competence as a multidimensional concept that assumes reciprocity between the ways an individual thinks, feels, and behaves in social situations.

The technologies will also be developed with close involvement from teachers, children and young people, parents and other professionals. Thus, the project stands to offer considerable benefits to children, young people and their teachers with regard to practical ideas and support for facilitating social skills. The project will also considerably extend conceptual knowledge within the research community regarding how and why these particular technologies may promote understanding and skills for children with, and without, autism.

Dr. Sarah Parsons, Senior Research Fellow in the School of Education, is the University of Birmingham’s lead academic on the project. She will be working closely with the team at the University of Nottingham and focusing on the use of Collaborative Virtual Environments.  Sarah will be exploring the links between how children use and interpret the technology and whether this helps them to learn new information. She will also be leading the formal evaluation of the technology in the final year of the project. The evaluation will assess whether children can learn social information and skills through their use of the technology and also, crucially, whether this understanding transfers to other ‘real world’ contexts.

For further information on the project, please visit the COSPATIAL website

Contact information:

Email: s.j.parsons@bham.ac.uk

Telephone: 0121 414 4819