Frontiers in Rehabilitation Sciences (Mar 2022)

Parent-Researcher Perspectives on Role Intersectionality Related to Autism Research

  • Laura J. Hall,
  • Natalie A. Hoxie,
  • Gretchen S. Grundon,
  • Yulian N. Cordero

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fresc.2022.718398
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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Although parents of children with autism who are also experts in a related profession have been instrumental in shaping current practices, there is little known about parent-researchers and the benefits and obstacles to including individuals with these intersectional identities on autism focused research teams. The following study used collaborative autoethnographies from three parent-researchers hired for a large scale, federally funded project. The parent-researchers, and co-authors, collaborated on all phases of the reported study. Common themes generated from the shared perspectives included: prioritizing children and professional sacrifices; professional training as an asset for parents; potential bias toward parents in professional contexts; assets as parent-professionals; and obstacles for maintaining intersectional roles of parent-professionals. Recommendations for autism researchers and considerations for employing and supporting parent-researchers are discussed.

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