
{"id":709317,"date":"2026-06-18T23:25:55","date_gmt":"2026-06-18T21:25:55","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/autisme-au-college-et-au-lycee-guide-complet-pour-comprendre-le-profil-autistique-dynseo-2\/"},"modified":"2026-06-18T23:29:44","modified_gmt":"2026-06-18T21:29:44","slug":"autism-in-middle-and-high-school-complete-guide-to-understanding-the-autistic-profile-dynseo","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/en\/autism-in-middle-and-high-school-complete-guide-to-understanding-the-autistic-profile-dynseo\/","title":{"rendered":"Autism in Middle and High School: Complete Guide to Understanding the Autistic Profile | DYNSEO"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>[et_pb_section fb_built=&#8221;1&#8243; admin_label=&#8221;Article HTML&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.16&#8243; custom_padding=&#8221;0px||0px||false|false&#8221; global_colors_info=&#8221;{}&#8221;][et_pb_row admin_label=&#8221;Contenu&#8221; _builder_version=&#8221;4.16&#8243; 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lyc\u00e9e : d\u00e9finition TSA, spectre et diversit\u00e9 des profils, m\u00e9canismes neurologiques, pr\u00e9valence, d\u00e9fis du secondaire, forces m\u00e9connues, id\u00e9es re\u00e7ues, impact sur la scolarit\u00e9, adaptations fondamentales. Formation certifi\u00e9e Qualiopi DYNSEO.\",\n  \"image\":\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Autisme-en-etablissement-Accompagnement-Global-1.jpg\",\n  \"author\":{\"@type\":\"Organization\",\"name\":\"DYNSEO\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\"},\n  \"publisher\":{\"@type\":\"Organization\",\"name\":\"DYNSEO\",\"logo\":{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/03\/logo-dynseo.png\"}},\n  \"datePublished\":\"2026-03-07\",\n  \"dateModified\":\"2026-03-07\",\n  \"mainEntityOfPage\":\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/autisme-college-lycee-guide-complet\/\"\n}\n<\/script><\/p>\n<div class=\"dbi-art-103231\">\n<header class=\"article-hero\">\n<div class=\"article-hero-inner\">\n<nav class=\"article-breadcrumb\">\n      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/en\/\">Home<\/a> &rsaquo;<br \/>\n      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/formations\/\">Training<\/a> &rsaquo;<br \/>\n      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/courses\/autism-au-college-et-au-lycee-comprendre-le-profil-autistique-et-adapter-ses-pratiques\/\">Autism in middle and high school<\/a> &rsaquo;<br \/>\n      Complete guide<br \/>\n    <\/nav>\n<p>    <span class=\"article-category\">&#x1F9E0; UNDERSTANDING AUTISM<\/span><\/p>\n<h1>Autism in middle and high school&nbsp;: <span class=\"hl\">complete guide<\/span> to understand the autistic profile<\/h1>\n<div class=\"article-meta\">\n      <span>&#x1F4C5; March 2026<\/span><br \/>\n      <span>&#x23F1; 22 min read<\/span><br \/>\n      <span>&#x1F3EB; By the DYNSEO team<\/span>\n    <\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"article-hero-curve\"><\/div>\n<\/header>\n<div class=\"container\">\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/autism-en-etablissement-Accompagnement-Global-1.jpg\" alt=\"Autism in middle and high school \u2014 DYNSEO training to understand the autistic profile\" style=\"width:100%;border-radius:20px;margin:30px 0 10px;box-shadow:0 6px 25px rgba(0,0,0,.08);\"><\/p>\n<article class=\"article-body\">\n<div class=\"toc\">\n<h4>&#x1F4D1; Table of contents<\/h4>\n<ol>\n<li><a href=\"#definition\">Autism today: an updated definition<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#spectre\">The autistic spectrum: understanding the diversity of profiles<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#mecanismes\">Neurological mechanisms: how an autistic brain works<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#prevalence\">Prevalence in middle and high school: students in every class<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#secondaire\">Why secondary school is a pivotal moment for autistic students<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#forces\">The unknown strengths of the autistic profile<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#idees-recues\">Seven misconceptions about autism debunked<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#impact\">Impact of autism on schooling: area by area<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#adaptations\">Fundamental adaptations: what every teacher can do<\/a><\/li>\n<li><a href=\"#cas-pratiques\">Practical cases: autism in secondary school in real situations<\/a><\/li>\n<\/ol>\n<\/div>\n<pee>In every middle and high school class, there are autistic students. Some have been diagnosed since childhood, supported for years by experienced multidisciplinary teams. Others have just been identified, often after years of misunderstandings and unexplained failures. Still others will go through their entire secondary education without ever receiving a diagnosis \u2014 masking their difficulties with considerable energy, paying for this concealment with chronic exhaustion that no one sees.<\/pee>\n<pee>Autism in middle and high school is a daily reality for thousands of teachers \u2014 who, for the vast majority of them, have never received specific training to understand and support these students. The result is predictable: students who excel in some areas and struggle greatly in others, perceived as &#8220;strange,&#8221; &#8220;rigid,&#8221; &#8220;asocial,&#8221; or &#8220;unmotivated&#8221; by adults who confuse the manifestations of the disorder with behavioral choices.<\/pee>\n<pee>This guide is the first in a series of eight articles dedicated to autism in middle and high school. It lays the foundations: what is autism really, how does an autistic brain work, what profiles do you encounter in your classes, and what fundamental adaptations are accessible to every teacher. The following articles will delve into each dimension \u2014 warning signs, executive functions, social interactions, sensory overload, anxiety \u2014 with concrete tools for each situation.<\/pee>\n<h2 id=\"definition\">1. Autism today: an updated definition<\/h2>\n<pee>Autism \u2014 officially referred to in international diagnostic classifications as &#8220;Autism Spectrum Disorder&#8221; (ASD) \u2014 is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by two main categories of features: differences in communication and social interactions on one hand, and restricted and repetitive behaviors, interests, or activities on the other. These features are present from early childhood and persist throughout life, even though their expression evolves significantly with age, learning, and the compensatory strategies developed by the individual.<\/pee>\n<pee>The definition of autism has evolved significantly over the past thirty years. What was once called &#8220;Asperger syndrome,&#8221; &#8220;high-functioning autism,&#8221; or &#8220;atypical autism&#8221; is now grouped under the single term ASD \u2014 thus recognizing that these different labels described different expressions of the same neurological spectrum, rather than distinct conditions. This evolution is important for teachers: a student diagnosed with &#8220;Asperger&#8221; in the 2000s and a student diagnosed with &#8220;Level 1 ASD&#8221; in 2024 may have very similar profiles \u2014 the terminology has changed, not the neurological reality.<\/pee>\n<pee>A also important semantic clarification: autism is not a disease to be cured. It is a different way of processing information, interacting with the world, and perceiving the environment. Many autistic individuals \u2014 especially those who publicly express their own experiences \u2014 use the term &#8220;neurodiversity&#8221; to refer to this neurological difference, rejecting the logic of deficit in favor of a logic of difference. This perspective increasingly influences support practices: it is not about &#8220;normalizing&#8221; the autistic student, but about creating school conditions in which their different mode of functioning is not an obstacle to learning.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"info-box\">\n  <pee><strong>&#x1F4CA; Autism in numbers worldwide.<\/strong> Recent epidemiological studies estimate the prevalence of ASD at about 1 in 36 to 50 children depending on the populations and methodologies. In France, estimates range from 1% to 2% of the general population. In a class of 30 middle or high school students, there are statistically between 1 and 2 autistic students \u2014 diagnosed or not. The boy\/girl ratio is estimated to be about 3 to 1 in diagnoses, but researchers now agree that autism in girls is massively underdiagnosed, particularly because their social camouflage strategies are more effective and their profile is less in line with the male stereotype that has long dominated research.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<h2 id=\"spectre\">2. The autistic spectrum: understanding the diversity of profiles<\/h2>\n<pee>The term &#8220;spectrum&#8221; is fundamental \u2014 and often misunderstood. It does not mean that autism ranges from &#8220;mild&#8221; to &#8220;severe&#8221; on a linear scale. It means that autism is a constellation of traits that combine differently in each person, creating a diversity of profiles as broad as human diversity itself. The most accurate metaphor is not a straight line (from least to most autistic) but a color wheel: each trait \u2014 communication, sensory perception, social cognition, interests, flexibility \u2014 has its own level of intensity, and it is the unique combination of these levels that defines the profile of each autistic person.<\/pee>\n<pee>In middle and high school classes, this diversity translates into profiles that teachers do not always recognize as autistic.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"profil-grid\">\n<div class=\"profil-card\">\n<div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F4DA; The brilliant and puzzling student<\/div>\n<ul>\n<li>Encyclopedic knowledge in one or two areas<\/li>\n<li>Adult vocabulary, remarkable language precision<\/li>\n<li>Difficulty adapting speech to context or interlocutor<\/li>\n<li>Misunderstanding of the implicit social rules of the class<\/li>\n<li>Perceived as &#8220;arrogant&#8221; or &#8220;professorial&#8221; by peers<\/li>\n<li>Very heterogeneous results depending on subjects and types of tasks<\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n<div class=\"profil-card\">\n<div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F910; The silent and withdrawn student<\/div>\n<ul>\n<li>Minimal oral participation, evasive glances<\/li>\n<li>Systematically works alone, avoids group work<\/li>\n<li>Perceived as shy or &#8220;in their bubble&#8221;<\/li>\n<li>Visible anxiety in unpredictable situations<\/li>\n<li>Difficulties with eye contact interpreted as a lack of attention<\/li>\n<li>Good written results contrasting with difficulties in oral tasks<\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n<div class=\"profil-card\">\n<div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F4A5; The student in recurrent crisis<\/div>\n<ul>\n<li>Disproportionate reactions to changes in routine<\/li>\n<li>Crisis or meltdowns after seemingly normal days<\/li>\n<li>Intolerance to certain noises, lights, or textures<\/li>\n<li>Repetitive behaviors (stereotypies) in stressful situations<\/li>\n<li>Difficulties regulating emotions after frustration<\/li>\n<li>Perceived as &#8220;immature&#8221; or &#8220;difficult&#8221; by adults<\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n<div class=\"profil-card\">\n<div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F9B8;&#x200D;&#x2640;&#xFE0F; The student who camouflages (often female)<\/div>\n<ul>\n<li>Imitates the social behaviors of peers to blend in<\/li>\n<li>Appears &#8220;normal&#8221; in class, collapses at home after school<\/li>\n<li>Chronic exhaustion related to the effort of permanent masking<\/li>\n<li>Diagnosed with anxiety or depression before autism<\/li>\n<li>Intense interests but &#8220;socially acceptable&#8221; (reading, animals, K-pop\u2026)<\/li>\n<li>Often diagnosed late, in adolescence or adulthood<\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n<div class=\"profil-card\">\n<div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F9AE; The student with multiple comorbidities<\/div>\n<ul>\n<li>ASD + ADHD (profile &#8220;AuDHD&#8221; \u2014 very common, often misidentified)<\/li>\n<li>ASD + dyslexia or dyspraxia<\/li>\n<li>ASD + generalized anxiety or school phobia<\/li>\n<li>ASD + secondary depression related to years of non-recognition<\/li>\n<li>Complex profile difficult to read for the untrained teacher<\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n<div class=\"profil-card\">\n<div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F4A1; The student with paradoxical results<\/div>\n<ul>\n<li>Excellence in mathematics or sciences, severe difficulties in written expression<\/li>\n<li>Remarkable memory of facts, failing understanding of implicit meaning<\/li>\n<li>Superior logical reasoning, very limited language pragmatics<\/li>\n<li>Results dependent on personal interest in the subject<\/li>\n<li>Perceived as &#8220;not working regularly&#8221; when it is interest that modulates engagement<\/li>\n<\/ul><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<h2 id=\"mecanismes\">3. Neurological mechanisms: how an autistic brain works<\/h2>\n<pee>Understanding the neurological mechanisms of autism is the key that transforms the perception of autistic behaviors \u2014 from &#8220;unintelligible oddities&#8221; to &#8220;logical responses to a different way of processing information.&#8221; Three mechanisms are particularly important for secondary school teachers.<\/pee>\n<h3>Weak central coherence<\/h3>\n<pee>Most neurotypical brains process information in a &#8220;global-local&#8221; manner: they first perceive the whole (the forest) before the details (the trees). Autistic brains often function in an inverse mode: they first process details with remarkable precision and acuity, but have more difficulty spontaneously constructing a global coherence. This mechanism explains both the strengths of the autistic profile (attention to detail, precision, detection of minute errors) and certain difficulties (understanding the &#8220;general meaning&#8221; of a text, grasping an implicit instruction, adapting to a changing context).<\/pee>\n<h3>Atypical sensory processing<\/h3>\n<pee>The vast majority of autistic individuals exhibit particularities in their way of processing sensory information. These particularities can take the form of hypersensitivity (sounds, lights, textures, smells perceived with an intensity that exceeds the threshold of tolerance) or hyposensitivity (stimulation needed to feel present in their body). In an ordinary school environment \u2014 noisy, visually cluttered, unpredictable \u2014 these sensory particularities are a constant source of overload that consumes cognitive resources normally available for learning.<\/pee>\n<h3>Theory of mind and social cognition<\/h3>\n<pee>The &#8220;theory of mind&#8221; \u2014 the ability to infer the mental states of others (their intentions, beliefs, emotions) \u2014 is often more laborious in autism. It is not a lack of empathy: many autistic individuals feel emotions very intensely. It is rather a difficulty in decoding implicit social signals \u2014 nuances, irony, non-verbal conventions \u2014 that form the essence of ordinary human communication. In a school context, this translates into difficulties in understanding the implicit expectations of the teacher, decoding group dynamics, or correctly interpreting the intentions of peers.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"article-quote\">\n  <pee>My brain sees everything. The light flickering in the hallway, the chair creaking at the other end of the room, the smell of lunch coming from the hallway, the whispered conversation two rows away from me. I can&#8217;t turn it off. And while I manage all that, I also have to listen to the teacher, understand what he expects from me, look at the board, take notes. When people ask me why I&#8217;m tired after school, I don&#8217;t know how to explain that I&#8217;ve spent six hours doing twice as much work as everyone else.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"quote-author\">\u2014 Autistic student in 1st grade, testimony collected during a DYNSEO training<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<h2 id=\"prevalence\">4. Prevalence in middle and high school: students in every class<\/h2>\n<pee>If the prevalence of ASD is around 1 to 2% of the general population, each class of 30 to 35 students statistically has at least one autistic student. In a middle school of 500 students, it can be estimated that between 5 and 10 students have an ASD \u2014 diagnosed or not. This epidemiological reality is often underestimated by educational teams, who tend to perceive autism as exceptional rather than common.<\/pee>\n<pee>The difference between the number of diagnosed students and the number of students who are actually autistic in an institution is significant. Formal diagnosis requires a lengthy multidisciplinary assessment (often 1 to 3 years of waiting), is costly, and not always accessible. Many students \u2014 particularly girls, academically strong students, and students whose disorder is less &#8220;visible&#8221; \u2014 slip through the diagnostic net. Teachers trained to recognize warning signs play an essential role in guiding towards assessments that will change trajectories.<\/pee>\n<h2 id=\"secondaire\">5. Why secondary school is a pivotal moment for autistic students<\/h2>\n<pee>The transition to 6th grade \u2014 and even more so the entry into high school \u2014 represents a major break in the school environment for autistic students. The reasons are multiple and cumulative.<\/pee>\n<pee>The first shock is the <strong>multiplication of interlocutors<\/strong>. In primary school, the student generally has a main teacher who knows them well, learns to understand them, and builds a relationship of trust. In middle school, they move from class to class, with 8 to 10 different teachers, each with their own implicit rules, their own ways of functioning, and their own unspoken expectations. For an autistic student who needs stability, predictability, and established trusting relationships, this fragmentation is a major source of disorganization.<\/pee>\n<pee>The second shock is the <strong>complexification of social interactions<\/strong>. Adolescence is a period of intensification of social codes: groups form and reform, hierarchies are fluid and implicit, humor becomes more subtle and more cruel, romantic relationships add to friendships. For a student who already struggles to decode basic social rules, this additional complexity is often an insurmountable wall that leads to isolation.<\/pee>\n<pee>The third shock is the <strong>increase in workload and expected autonomy<\/strong>. Secondary school demands personal organization, agenda management, anticipation of deadlines, and the ability to prioritize, all of which rely on executive functions \u2014 precisely the neurological dimension that is most often weakened in autism.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"alerte-box\">\n<div class=\"alerte-box-title\">&#x26A0;&#xFE0F; The silent dropout of autistic students in secondary school<\/div>\n<pee>Studies on the educational trajectories of autistic students show that secondary school is the highest risk period for dropout \u2014 not because students lack intellectual abilities, but because the demands of the school environment exceed their adaptive capacities. This dropout is often preceded by a long period of &#8220;survival&#8221; \u2014 during which the student expends considerable energy to conform to social and academic expectations \u2014 and manifests abruptly in the form of collapse, school refusal, or anxious decompensation.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<h2 id=\"forces\">6. The unknown strengths of the autistic profile<\/h2>\n<pee>A pedagogical approach to autism based solely on difficulties misses the essential: autistic students bring ways of thinking, abilities, and perspectives to the classroom that enrich collective learning and constitute real assets in many professional contexts. Knowing these strengths allows teachers to identify, value, and use them as support points in their guidance.<\/pee>\n<table class=\"comparison-table\">\n<thead>\n<tr>\n<th>Strength of the autistic profile<\/th>\n<th>Manifestation in class<\/th>\n<th>Subjects \/ contexts where it is an asset<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Attention to detail<\/td>\n<td>Detects errors that no one else has seen, remarkable precision in observations<\/td>\n<td>Sciences, mathematics, languages (grammar), text revision<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Systematic thinking<\/td>\n<td>Ability to construct rigorous logical reasoning, taste for coherence<\/td>\n<td>Mathematics, philosophy, computer science, physics<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Fact memory<\/td>\n<td>Accurate and lasting memorization of large amounts of factual information<\/td>\n<td>History, geography, sciences, languages<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Intense interests (hyperfocus)<\/td>\n<td>Extraordinary investment in topics that excite, remarkable self-taught expertise<\/td>\n<td>Any subject that overlaps with the student&#8217;s interests<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Honesty and frankness<\/td>\n<td>Says what he thinks without beating around the bush \u2014 valuable in debates and discussions<\/td>\n<td>Philosophy, civic debates, group work when the environment is safe<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Original thinking<\/td>\n<td>Approaches problems from unexpected angles, proposes unconventional solutions<\/td>\n<td>Arts, creativity, complex problem solving, innovation<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Sense of justice<\/td>\n<td>Scrupulous respect for rules, acute sensitivity to injustices<\/td>\n<td>Civic education, class life, ethical projects<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<h2 id=\"idees-recues\">7. Seven misconceptions about autism deconstructed<\/h2>\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n<div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception #1 \u2014 &#8220;Autistic students do not want social contact&#8221;<\/div>\n<pee>Most autistic students desire social relationships \u2014 they struggle to build and maintain them, not because they are disinterested, but because the implicit codes that govern these relationships are opaque to them.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n<div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n<pee>Isolation is often suffered, not chosen. An autistic student who eats alone in the cafeteria has not necessarily chosen solitude \u2014 he may have simply given up on decoding group dynamics that are too costly for him.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n<div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b02 \u2014 &#8220;All autistic people are geniuses in math&#8221;<\/div>\n<pee>The stereotype of the &#8220;autistic genius&#8221; (Rain Man, Sheldon Cooper) is both flattering and reductive. Autism is not correlated with a universal mathematical gift. Each autistic profile is unique \u2014 some autistic students are passionate about literature, history, or music.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n<div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n<pee>What is often true is that autistic students can develop extraordinary expertise in their specific area of interest \u2014 whatever that area may be.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n<div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b03 \u2014 &#8220;If he has meltdowns, it&#8217;s to get attention&#8221;<\/div>\n<pee>Autistic meltdowns or shutdowns are not manipulative behaviors. They are the result of sensory, emotional, or cognitive overload that exceeds the student&#8217;s regulation abilities.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n<div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n<pee>A student in crisis needs help to unload, not punishment. Understanding the triggers of their meltdowns can often prevent them.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n<div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b04 \u2014 &#8220;She can&#8217;t be autistic \u2014 she&#8217;s so sociable&#8221;<\/div>\n<pee>This remark is almost always directed at girls. &#8220;Masking&#8221; \u2014 the conscious or unconscious hiding of autistic traits to appear neurotypical \u2014 is a very common strategy, particularly among autistic girls and women.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n<div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n<pee>The ability to appear &#8220;normal&#8221; in public is exhausting and says nothing about whether a person is autistic or not. Shutdowns often occur in private spaces \u2014 at home, in the bathroom \u2014 precisely because masking stops.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n<div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b05 \u2014 &#8220;He could try harder to control himself&#8221;<\/div>\n<pee>Autistic behaviors \u2014 stereotypies, difficulties with eye contact, reactions to sensory stimuli \u2014 are not choices. They are automatic neurological responses that are difficult, if not impossible, to suppress sustainably without considerable cost.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n<div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n<pee>Asking an autistic student to &#8220;control themselves&#8221; in a situation of overload is comparable to asking a dyslexic student to &#8220;read correctly&#8221; under time pressure. Willpower has no effect on neurological mechanisms.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n<div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b06 \u2014 &#8220;Autism is always visible&#8221;<\/div>\n<pee>Media representations of autism (very visible behaviors, non-verbal communication, total isolation) correspond to the most prominent forms of the spectrum. The vast majority of autistic students in regular middle and high school classes have much less visible profiles.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n<div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n<pee>&#8220;Invisible&#8221; autism is the norm in regular schools. An autistic student can hold a conversation, make jokes, have friends \u2014 and exhibit all the characteristics of ASD in other dimensions.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n<div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b07 \u2014 &#8220;With good will, that&#8217;s enough&#8221;<\/div>\n<pee>Good will without training produces inconsistent accommodations, persistent misunderstandings, and avoidable crisis situations. Understanding autism requires specific training \u2014 not just good intentions.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n<div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n<pee>Goodwill is the necessary condition \u2014 training is the sufficient condition. It is their combination that produces truly effective support.<\/pee>\n<\/div>\n<h2 id=\"impact\">8. Impact of autism on schooling: domain by domain<\/h2>\n<table class=\"comparison-table\">\n<thead>\n<tr>\n<th>School domain<\/th>\n<th>Impact of autistic characteristics<\/th>\n<th>What the teacher observes<\/th>\n<\/tr>\n<\/thead>\n<tbody>\n<tr>\n<td>Understanding instructions<\/td>\n<td>Difficulty interpreting nuances and implicit expectations<\/td>\n<td>The student responds to the letter of the instruction but not to the spirit; numerous questions to verify what is expected<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Group work<\/td>\n<td>Difficulty negotiating roles, managing disagreements, adapting to changes in plans<\/td>\n<td>Isolation, recurring conflicts, rigidity on content or method<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Understanding literary texts<\/td>\n<td>Difficulty with implicit meaning, metaphor, irony, characters&#8217; intentions<\/td>\n<td>Correct literal understanding, difficult symbolic interpretation<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Written expression<\/td>\n<td>Difficulty adopting the reader&#8217;s perspective, structuring nuanced arguments<\/td>\n<td>Very factual or very detailed texts, lack of narrative &#8220;link&#8221;<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Oral assessments<\/td>\n<td>Anxiety in public exposure, pragmatic difficulties (adapting speech to the audience)<\/td>\n<td>Blocking or monologue, difficulty responding to follow-up questions<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Organization and planning<\/td>\n<td>Executive functions often weakened: agenda, priorities, time management<\/td>\n<td>Forgotten homework, missing materials, late submissions without visible bad will<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>Transitions and changes<\/td>\n<td>Strong need for predictability; unannounced changes deeply destabilize<\/td>\n<td>Disproportionate reactions to changes in room, schedule, or teacher<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<tr>\n<td>PE and arts<\/td>\n<td>Possible difficulties with activities that have a strong social component (team sports); strengths in individual activities<\/td>\n<td>Avoidance of team sports, possible excellence in individual activities (swimming, athletics, visual arts)<\/td>\n<\/tr>\n<\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n<h2 id=\"adaptations\">9. Fundamental adaptations: what every teacher can do<\/h2>\n<pee>Without waiting for a formal diagnosis, without an official accommodation plan, without a specific device \u2014 every teacher can implement simple adaptations that make a significant difference for the autistic students in their class. These adaptations also benefit all students, not just autistic students.<\/pee>\n<ul class=\"numbered-list\">\n<li><strong>Make expectations explicit and concrete.<\/strong> Never assume that an expectation is &#8220;obvious.&#8221; What the instruction expects, how the work should be submitted, what will be evaluated, how much time is available: everything must be clearly stated, preferably in writing. Vague or implicit instructions (&#8220;do something interesting&#8221;) are a major source of anxiety for autistic students.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Announce changes in advance.<\/strong> Canceled class, changed room, rescheduled assessment, replaced teacher: any modification to the usual routine must be announced as early as possible. Ideally in writing (message to families, note on the board at the beginning of the week). An autistic student informed of a change can prepare mentally. An autistic student surprised by a change may become overwhelmed.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Create stable course rituals.<\/strong> A course opening always in the same format (write the date and title, remind the session&#8217;s agenda, announce the objectives), a course closing always structured the same way (summary, homework, materials to take): these stable rituals are safety anchors for autistic students and impose no constraints on others.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Tolerate and understand stereotypies.<\/strong> A student who rocks, taps on their table, manipulates an object, gets up regularly: these behaviors are not disinterest or agitation \u2014 they are often strategies for sensory or emotional regulation. Tolerating them (within reasonable limits) reduces overload and improves the student&#8217;s cognitive availability.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Offer alternatives to group work.<\/strong> For students who have major difficulties with group dynamics, offering an alternative (individual work with the same level of demand, specific role in the group that corresponds to their strengths) avoids recurrent failure situations without taking away from the educational requirements.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Provide spaces for decompression.<\/strong> Recess is often for the autistic student a moment of intense social overload \u2014 not a moment of recovery. Allowing them to access a quiet space during transitions (library, quiet corner) can significantly reduce their overall cognitive load throughout the day.<\/li>\n<li><strong>Value specific interests as entry points into learning.<\/strong> If a student is passionate about trains, meteorology, or manga, using this area as an example in an explanation or as a topic for free work multiplies their engagement and motivation \u2014 and shows them that their universe is legitimate.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<h2 id=\"cas-pratiques\">10. Practical cases: autism in secondary school in real situations<\/h2>\n<div class=\"case-study\">\n<div class=\"case-study-header\">\n<div class=\"case-study-emoji\">&#x1F4DA;<\/div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"case-study-label\">Case study \u2014 10th grade, general high school<\/div>\n<div class=\"case-study-title\">Th\u00e9o, 15 years old: the &#8220;weird gifted&#8221; who is not gifted<\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<pee>Th\u00e9o arrives in 10th grade with an erratic school record: 18 in physics, 5 in French, 15 in history, 4 in PE. His teachers perceive him as intelligent but unpredictable \u2014 brilliant when the subject interests him, nonexistent otherwise. He eats alone, speaks little, answers questions in a very detailed and technical manner. He has been monitored for &#8220;school anxiety&#8221; since 5th grade.<\/pee>\n  <pee>His main teacher, trained in ASD, recognizes the profile. She guides the family towards an assessment that confirms level 1 ASD without associated intellectual disability. With the team, she implements: instructions always written on the board, a 24-hour notice for any program changes, tolerance for his manipulation object in class (a small ball), substitution of group work with optional individual work.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"case-study-result\">\n    <pee>&#x2705; <strong>Result:<\/strong> Crises in class almost completely disappear. His grades in French rise to 11 \u2014 not due to an improvement in his style, but thanks to much more precise writing instructions that finally allow him to know what is expected of him. He advances to scientific 11th grade and considers an engineering school.<\/pee>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"case-study\">\n<div class=\"case-study-header\">\n<div class=\"case-study-emoji\">&#x1F9B8;&#x200D;&#x2640;&#xFE0F;<\/div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"case-study-label\">Case study \u2014 8th grade, middle school<\/div>\n<div class=\"case-study-title\">Camille, 13 years old: the perfect masking until the collapse<\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<pee>Camille is a student appreciated by all adults. Smiling, polite, good student (12-13 average), with no disciplinary incidents. But starting in November, her parents report daily collapses at home \u2014 screaming, crying, inability to do her homework, refusal to go out on weekends. At school, nothing seems wrong. Her school counselor, trained in ASD during a workshop, notices that she always eats in the same place, systematically avoids noise, and seems exhausted by the end of the day.<\/pee>\n  <pee>A neuropsychological assessment confirms ASD with an intense masking profile. The team learns that Camille &#8220;plays a role&#8221; from morning to night to appear normal \u2014 and that the evening collapse is the release of six hours of cognitive and social overload. The adaptations put in place: access to a quiet room during one out of two breaks, reduction of mandatory oral participation, prior notice of group work.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"case-study-result\">\n    <pee>&#x2705; <strong>Result:<\/strong> Collapses at home significantly decrease in four weeks. Camille, met three months later, says: &#8220;Before, I was dying every day and no one knew. Now I just have the right to be tired.&#8221;<\/pee>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"case-study\">\n<div class=\"case-study-header\">\n<div class=\"case-study-emoji\">&#x1F4A1;<\/div>\n<div>\n<div class=\"case-study-label\">Case study \u2014 Middle school, entire team<\/div>\n<div class=\"case-study-title\">When a training day changes the perspective of an entire institution<\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<pee>A college with 420 students organizes a DYNSEO training day on autism. At the end of the morning, during a workshop on warning signs, five different teachers spontaneously mention the same student \u2014 a 9th-grade boy whom each perceives through the lens of their discipline (the &#8220;bad at sports,&#8221; the &#8220;too literal in French,&#8221; the &#8220;history obsessed,&#8221; the &#8220;difficult in groups&#8221;). None had ever made the connection. Together, they build a profile that very precisely matches the criteria for ASD.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"case-study-result\">\n    <pee>&#x2705; <strong>Impact:<\/strong> The student is referred for an assessment that confirms the ASD at 15 years old \u2014 after nine years of schooling without understanding his profile. His mother, upon learning the diagnosis, cries and says: &#8220;Finally, I understand his entire childhood.&#8221; The college team sets up an urgent accommodation plan for the end of 9th grade. The training cost one day. It had taken nine years not to have done it.<\/pee>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<pee>Autism in middle and high school is a daily reality that affects every class, every institution, every educational team. Understanding the autistic profile \u2014 its mechanisms, its diversity, its strengths, and its challenges \u2014 is the first step towards support that allows these students to reveal their true abilities rather than expend their energy just surviving in an environment designed for brains that function differently from theirs. The following seven articles in this series delve into each dimension of this support.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"cta-box\">\n<h3>&#x1F393; Train your team on autism in middle and high school<\/h3>\n<pee>The DYNSEO training &#8220;Autism in middle and high school&#8221; gives each team member the keys to understand the autistic profile and adapt their practices. Qualiopi certified \u2014 eligible for funding \u2014 in-person or hybrid.<\/pee>\n<div class=\"cta-buttons\">\n    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/courses\/autism-au-college-et-au-lycee-comprendre-le-profil-autistique-et-adapter-ses-pratiques\/\" class=\"btn-cta-white\">&#x1F4CB; View the program<\/a><br \/>\n    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/formations\/\" class=\"btn-cta-outline\">All trainings &#x2192;<\/a>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p><a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/courses\/autism-au-college-et-au-lycee-comprendre-le-profil-autistique-et-adapter-ses-pratiques\/\" class=\"internal-link\"><\/p>\n<div class=\"internal-link-icon\">&#x1F9E0;<\/div>\n<div class=\"internal-link-content\">\n<div class=\"internal-link-label\">Qualiopi certified training<\/div>\n<div class=\"internal-link-title\">Autism in middle and high school: understanding the autistic profile and adapting practices<\/div>\n<div class=\"internal-link-desc\">The complete training for all secondary teams \u2014 from recognizing signs to implementing adaptations.<\/div>\n<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"internal-link-arrow\">&#x2192;<\/div>\n<p><\/a><\/p>\n<div class=\"article-tags\">\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">autism middle high school guide<\/a><br \/>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">ASD secondary teachers<\/a><br \/>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">adolescent autistic profile<\/a><br \/>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">autism spectrum disorder school<\/a><br \/>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">autism masking high school<\/a><br \/>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">pedagogical adaptations autism<\/a><br \/>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">autism training Qualiopi<\/a><br \/>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">DYNSEO autism training<\/a>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>[\/et_pb_code][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"","protected":false},"author":4,"featured_media":150367,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_et_pb_use_builder":"on","_et_pb_old_content":"[et_pb_section fb_built=\"1\" admin_label=\"Article HTML\" _builder_version=\"4.16\" custom_padding=\"0px||0px||false|false\" global_colors_info=\"{}\"][et_pb_row admin_label=\"Contenu\" _builder_version=\"4.16\" width=\"100%\" max_width=\"100%\" custom_padding=\"0px||0px||false|false\" global_colors_info=\"{}\"][et_pb_column type=\"4_4\" _builder_version=\"4.16\" global_colors_info=\"{}\"][et_pb_code admin_label=\"HTML import\u00e9\" _builder_version=\"4.16\" global_colors_info=\"{}\"]<style type=\"text\/css\">\n:root{\n  --bleu:#5e5ed7;--bleu-soft:#eeeeff;--bleu2:#5268c9;--bleu2-soft:#e8ecfa;\n  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.dbi-art-103231 .comparison-table tbody td {padding:10px 12px;}\n.dbi-art-103231 .toc {padding:22px 20px;}\n}\n\n<\/style>\n<script type=\"application\/ld+json\">\n{\n  \"@context\":\"https:\/\/schema.org\",\n  \"@type\":\"Article\",\n  \"headline\":\"Autisme au coll\u00e8ge et au lyc\u00e9e : guide complet pour comprendre le profil autistique\",\n  \"description\":\"Guide complet sur l'autisme au coll\u00e8ge et au lyc\u00e9e : d\u00e9finition TSA, spectre et diversit\u00e9 des profils, m\u00e9canismes neurologiques, pr\u00e9valence, d\u00e9fis du secondaire, forces m\u00e9connues, id\u00e9es re\u00e7ues, impact sur la scolarit\u00e9, adaptations fondamentales. Formation certifi\u00e9e Qualiopi DYNSEO.\",\n  \"image\":\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/Autisme-en-etablissement-Accompagnement-Global-1.jpg\",\n  \"author\":{\"@type\":\"Organization\",\"name\":\"DYNSEO\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\"},\n  \"publisher\":{\"@type\":\"Organization\",\"name\":\"DYNSEO\",\"logo\":{\"@type\":\"ImageObject\",\"url\":\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2021\/03\/logo-dynseo.png\"}},\n  \"datePublished\":\"2026-03-07\",\n  \"dateModified\":\"2026-03-07\",\n  \"mainEntityOfPage\":\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/autisme-college-lycee-guide-complet\/\"\n}\n<\/script>\n<div class=\"dbi-art-103231\">\n<header class=\"article-hero\">\n  <div class=\"article-hero-inner\">\n    <nav class=\"article-breadcrumb\">\n      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/\">Home<\/a> &rsaquo;\n      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/formations\/\">Training<\/a> &rsaquo;\n      <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/courses\/autism-au-college-et-au-lycee-comprendre-le-profil-autistique-et-adapter-ses-pratiques\/\">Autism in middle and high school<\/a> &rsaquo;\n      Complete guide\n    <\/nav>\n    <span class=\"article-category\">&#x1F9E0; UNDERSTANDING AUTISM<\/span>\n    <h1>Autism in middle and high school&nbsp;: <span class=\"hl\">complete guide<\/span> to understand the autistic profile<\/h1>\n    <div class=\"article-meta\">\n      <span>&#x1F4C5; March 2026<\/span>\n      <span>&#x23F1; 22 min read<\/span>\n      <span>&#x1F3EB; By the DYNSEO team<\/span>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"article-hero-curve\"><\/div>\n<\/header>\n\n<div class=\"container\">\n\n<img src=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/03\/autism-en-etablissement-Accompagnement-Global-1.jpg\" alt=\"Autism in middle and high school \u2014 DYNSEO training to understand the autistic profile\" style=\"width:100%;border-radius:20px;margin:30px 0 10px;box-shadow:0 6px 25px rgba(0,0,0,.08);\">\n\n<article class=\"article-body\">\n\n<div class=\"toc\">\n  <h4>&#x1F4D1; Table of contents<\/h4>\n  <ol>\n    <li><a href=\"#definition\">Autism today: an updated definition<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#spectre\">The autistic spectrum: understanding the diversity of profiles<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#mecanismes\">Neurological mechanisms: how an autistic brain works<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#prevalence\">Prevalence in middle and high school: students in every class<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#secondaire\">Why secondary school is a pivotal moment for autistic students<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#forces\">The unknown strengths of the autistic profile<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#idees-recues\">Seven misconceptions about autism debunked<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#impact\">Impact of autism on schooling: area by area<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#adaptations\">Fundamental adaptations: what every teacher can do<\/a><\/li>\n    <li><a href=\"#cas-pratiques\">Practical cases: autism in secondary school in real situations<\/a><\/li>\n  <\/ol>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>In every middle and high school class, there are autistic students. Some have been diagnosed since childhood, supported for years by experienced multidisciplinary teams. Others have just been identified, often after years of misunderstandings and unexplained failures. Still others will go through their entire secondary education without ever receiving a diagnosis \u2014 masking their difficulties with considerable energy, paying for this concealment with chronic exhaustion that no one sees.<\/p>\n\n<p>Autism in middle and high school is a daily reality for thousands of teachers \u2014 who, for the vast majority of them, have never received specific training to understand and support these students. The result is predictable: students who excel in some areas and struggle greatly in others, perceived as \"strange,\" \"rigid,\" \"asocial,\" or \"unmotivated\" by adults who confuse the manifestations of the disorder with behavioral choices.<\/p>\n\n<p>This guide is the first in a series of eight articles dedicated to autism in middle and high school. It lays the foundations: what is autism really, how does an autistic brain work, what profiles do you encounter in your classes, and what fundamental adaptations are accessible to every teacher. The following articles will delve into each dimension \u2014 warning signs, executive functions, social interactions, sensory overload, anxiety \u2014 with concrete tools for each situation.<\/p>\n\n<h2 id=\"definition\">1. Autism today: an updated definition<\/h2>\n\n<p>Autism \u2014 officially referred to in international diagnostic classifications as \"Autism Spectrum Disorder\" (ASD) \u2014 is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by two main categories of features: differences in communication and social interactions on one hand, and restricted and repetitive behaviors, interests, or activities on the other. These features are present from early childhood and persist throughout life, even though their expression evolves significantly with age, learning, and the compensatory strategies developed by the individual.<\/p>\n\n<p>The definition of autism has evolved significantly over the past thirty years. What was once called \"Asperger syndrome,\" \"high-functioning autism,\" or \"atypical autism\" is now grouped under the single term ASD \u2014 thus recognizing that these different labels described different expressions of the same neurological spectrum, rather than distinct conditions. This evolution is important for teachers: a student diagnosed with \"Asperger\" in the 2000s and a student diagnosed with \"Level 1 ASD\" in 2024 may have very similar profiles \u2014 the terminology has changed, not the neurological reality.<\/p>\n\n<p>A also important semantic clarification: autism is not a disease to be cured. It is a different way of processing information, interacting with the world, and perceiving the environment. Many autistic individuals \u2014 especially those who publicly express their own experiences \u2014 use the term \"neurodiversity\" to refer to this neurological difference, rejecting the logic of deficit in favor of a logic of difference. This perspective increasingly influences support practices: it is not about \"normalizing\" the autistic student, but about creating school conditions in which their different mode of functioning is not an obstacle to learning.<\/p>\n<div class=\"info-box\">\n  <p><strong>&#x1F4CA; Autism in numbers worldwide.<\/strong> Recent epidemiological studies estimate the prevalence of ASD at about 1 in 36 to 50 children depending on the populations and methodologies. In France, estimates range from 1% to 2% of the general population. In a class of 30 middle or high school students, there are statistically between 1 and 2 autistic students \u2014 diagnosed or not. The boy\/girl ratio is estimated to be about 3 to 1 in diagnoses, but researchers now agree that autism in girls is massively underdiagnosed, particularly because their social camouflage strategies are more effective and their profile is less in line with the male stereotype that has long dominated research.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2 id=\"spectre\">2. The autistic spectrum: understanding the diversity of profiles<\/h2>\n\n<p>The term \"spectrum\" is fundamental \u2014 and often misunderstood. It does not mean that autism ranges from \"mild\" to \"severe\" on a linear scale. It means that autism is a constellation of traits that combine differently in each person, creating a diversity of profiles as broad as human diversity itself. The most accurate metaphor is not a straight line (from least to most autistic) but a color wheel: each trait \u2014 communication, sensory perception, social cognition, interests, flexibility \u2014 has its own level of intensity, and it is the unique combination of these levels that defines the profile of each autistic person.<\/p>\n\n<p>In middle and high school classes, this diversity translates into profiles that teachers do not always recognize as autistic.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"profil-grid\">\n  <div class=\"profil-card\">\n    <div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F4DA; The brilliant and puzzling student<\/div>\n    <ul>\n      <li>Encyclopedic knowledge in one or two areas<\/li>\n      <li>Adult vocabulary, remarkable language precision<\/li>\n      <li>Difficulty adapting speech to context or interlocutor<\/li>\n      <li>Misunderstanding of the implicit social rules of the class<\/li>\n      <li>Perceived as \"arrogant\" or \"professorial\" by peers<\/li>\n      <li>Very heterogeneous results depending on subjects and types of tasks<\/li>\n    <\/ul>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"profil-card\">\n    <div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F910; The silent and withdrawn student<\/div>\n    <ul>\n      <li>Minimal oral participation, evasive glances<\/li>\n      <li>Systematically works alone, avoids group work<\/li>\n      <li>Perceived as shy or \"in their bubble\"<\/li>\n      <li>Visible anxiety in unpredictable situations<\/li>\n      <li>Difficulties with eye contact interpreted as a lack of attention<\/li>\n      <li>Good written results contrasting with difficulties in oral tasks<\/li>\n    <\/ul>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"profil-card\">\n    <div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F4A5; The student in recurrent crisis<\/div>\n    <ul>\n      <li>Disproportionate reactions to changes in routine<\/li>\n      <li>Crisis or meltdowns after seemingly normal days<\/li>\n      <li>Intolerance to certain noises, lights, or textures<\/li>\n      <li>Repetitive behaviors (stereotypies) in stressful situations<\/li>\n      <li>Difficulties regulating emotions after frustration<\/li>\n      <li>Perceived as \"immature\" or \"difficult\" by adults<\/li>\n    <\/ul>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"profil-card\">\n<div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F9B8;&#x200D;&#x2640;&#xFE0F; The student who camouflages (often female)<\/div>\n    <ul>\n      <li>Imitates the social behaviors of peers to blend in<\/li>\n      <li>Appears \"normal\" in class, collapses at home after school<\/li>\n      <li>Chronic exhaustion related to the effort of permanent masking<\/li>\n      <li>Diagnosed with anxiety or depression before autism<\/li>\n      <li>Intense interests but \"socially acceptable\" (reading, animals, K-pop\u2026)<\/li>\n      <li>Often diagnosed late, in adolescence or adulthood<\/li>\n    <\/ul>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"profil-card\">\n    <div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F9AE; The student with multiple comorbidities<\/div>\n    <ul>\n      <li>ASD + ADHD (profile \"AuDHD\" \u2014 very common, often misidentified)<\/li>\n      <li>ASD + dyslexia or dyspraxia<\/li>\n      <li>ASD + generalized anxiety or school phobia<\/li>\n      <li>ASD + secondary depression related to years of non-recognition<\/li>\n      <li>Complex profile difficult to read for the untrained teacher<\/li>\n    <\/ul>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"profil-card\">\n<div class=\"profil-card-title\">&#x1F4A1; The student with paradoxical results<\/div>\n    <ul>\n      <li>Excellence in mathematics or sciences, severe difficulties in written expression<\/li>\n      <li>Remarkable memory of facts, failing understanding of implicit meaning<\/li>\n      <li>Superior logical reasoning, very limited language pragmatics<\/li>\n      <li>Results dependent on personal interest in the subject<\/li>\n      <li>Perceived as \"not working regularly\" when it is interest that modulates engagement<\/li>\n    <\/ul>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2 id=\"mecanismes\">3. Neurological mechanisms: how an autistic brain works<\/h2>\n\n<p>Understanding the neurological mechanisms of autism is the key that transforms the perception of autistic behaviors \u2014 from \"unintelligible oddities\" to \"logical responses to a different way of processing information.\" Three mechanisms are particularly important for secondary school teachers.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Weak central coherence<\/h3>\n\n<p>Most neurotypical brains process information in a \"global-local\" manner: they first perceive the whole (the forest) before the details (the trees). Autistic brains often function in an inverse mode: they first process details with remarkable precision and acuity, but have more difficulty spontaneously constructing a global coherence. This mechanism explains both the strengths of the autistic profile (attention to detail, precision, detection of minute errors) and certain difficulties (understanding the \"general meaning\" of a text, grasping an implicit instruction, adapting to a changing context).<\/p>\n\n<h3>Atypical sensory processing<\/h3>\n\n<p>The vast majority of autistic individuals exhibit particularities in their way of processing sensory information. These particularities can take the form of hypersensitivity (sounds, lights, textures, smells perceived with an intensity that exceeds the threshold of tolerance) or hyposensitivity (stimulation needed to feel present in their body). In an ordinary school environment \u2014 noisy, visually cluttered, unpredictable \u2014 these sensory particularities are a constant source of overload that consumes cognitive resources normally available for learning.<\/p>\n\n<h3>Theory of mind and social cognition<\/h3>\n\n<p>The \"theory of mind\" \u2014 the ability to infer the mental states of others (their intentions, beliefs, emotions) \u2014 is often more laborious in autism. It is not a lack of empathy: many autistic individuals feel emotions very intensely. It is rather a difficulty in decoding implicit social signals \u2014 nuances, irony, non-verbal conventions \u2014 that form the essence of ordinary human communication. In a school context, this translates into difficulties in understanding the implicit expectations of the teacher, decoding group dynamics, or correctly interpreting the intentions of peers.<\/p>\n<div class=\"article-quote\">\n  <p>My brain sees everything. The light flickering in the hallway, the chair creaking at the other end of the room, the smell of lunch coming from the hallway, the whispered conversation two rows away from me. I can't turn it off. And while I manage all that, I also have to listen to the teacher, understand what he expects from me, look at the board, take notes. When people ask me why I'm tired after school, I don't know how to explain that I've spent six hours doing twice as much work as everyone else.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"quote-author\">\u2014 Autistic student in 1st grade, testimony collected during a DYNSEO training<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2 id=\"prevalence\">4. Prevalence in middle and high school: students in every class<\/h2>\n\n<p>If the prevalence of ASD is around 1 to 2% of the general population, each class of 30 to 35 students statistically has at least one autistic student. In a middle school of 500 students, it can be estimated that between 5 and 10 students have an ASD \u2014 diagnosed or not. This epidemiological reality is often underestimated by educational teams, who tend to perceive autism as exceptional rather than common.<\/p>\n\n<p>The difference between the number of diagnosed students and the number of students who are actually autistic in an institution is significant. Formal diagnosis requires a lengthy multidisciplinary assessment (often 1 to 3 years of waiting), is costly, and not always accessible. Many students \u2014 particularly girls, academically strong students, and students whose disorder is less \"visible\" \u2014 slip through the diagnostic net. Teachers trained to recognize warning signs play an essential role in guiding towards assessments that will change trajectories.<\/p>\n\n<h2 id=\"secondaire\">5. Why secondary school is a pivotal moment for autistic students<\/h2>\n\n<p>The transition to 6th grade \u2014 and even more so the entry into high school \u2014 represents a major break in the school environment for autistic students. The reasons are multiple and cumulative.<\/p>\n\n<p>The first shock is the <strong>multiplication of interlocutors<\/strong>. In primary school, the student generally has a main teacher who knows them well, learns to understand them, and builds a relationship of trust. In middle school, they move from class to class, with 8 to 10 different teachers, each with their own implicit rules, their own ways of functioning, and their own unspoken expectations. For an autistic student who needs stability, predictability, and established trusting relationships, this fragmentation is a major source of disorganization.<\/p>\n\n<p>The second shock is the <strong>complexification of social interactions<\/strong>. Adolescence is a period of intensification of social codes: groups form and reform, hierarchies are fluid and implicit, humor becomes more subtle and more cruel, romantic relationships add to friendships. For a student who already struggles to decode basic social rules, this additional complexity is often an insurmountable wall that leads to isolation.<\/p>\n\n<p>The third shock is the <strong>increase in workload and expected autonomy<\/strong>. Secondary school demands personal organization, agenda management, anticipation of deadlines, and the ability to prioritize, all of which rely on executive functions \u2014 precisely the neurological dimension that is most often weakened in autism.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"alerte-box\">\n<div class=\"alerte-box-title\">&#x26A0;&#xFE0F; The silent dropout of autistic students in secondary school<\/div>\n  <p>Studies on the educational trajectories of autistic students show that secondary school is the highest risk period for dropout \u2014 not because students lack intellectual abilities, but because the demands of the school environment exceed their adaptive capacities. This dropout is often preceded by a long period of \"survival\" \u2014 during which the student expends considerable energy to conform to social and academic expectations \u2014 and manifests abruptly in the form of collapse, school refusal, or anxious decompensation.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2 id=\"forces\">6. The unknown strengths of the autistic profile<\/h2>\n\n<p>A pedagogical approach to autism based solely on difficulties misses the essential: autistic students bring ways of thinking, abilities, and perspectives to the classroom that enrich collective learning and constitute real assets in many professional contexts. Knowing these strengths allows teachers to identify, value, and use them as support points in their guidance.<\/p>\n\n<table class=\"comparison-table\">\n  <thead>\n    <tr>\n      <th>Strength of the autistic profile<\/th>\n      <th>Manifestation in class<\/th>\n      <th>Subjects \/ contexts where it is an asset<\/th>\n    <\/tr>\n  <\/thead>\n  <tbody>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Attention to detail<\/td>\n      <td>Detects errors that no one else has seen, remarkable precision in observations<\/td>\n      <td>Sciences, mathematics, languages (grammar), text revision<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Systematic thinking<\/td>\n      <td>Ability to construct rigorous logical reasoning, taste for coherence<\/td>\n      <td>Mathematics, philosophy, computer science, physics<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Fact memory<\/td>\n      <td>Accurate and lasting memorization of large amounts of factual information<\/td>\n      <td>History, geography, sciences, languages<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Intense interests (hyperfocus)<\/td>\n      <td>Extraordinary investment in topics that excite, remarkable self-taught expertise<\/td>\n      <td>Any subject that overlaps with the student's interests<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Honesty and frankness<\/td>\n      <td>Says what he thinks without beating around the bush \u2014 valuable in debates and discussions<\/td>\n      <td>Philosophy, civic debates, group work when the environment is safe<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Original thinking<\/td>\n      <td>Approaches problems from unexpected angles, proposes unconventional solutions<\/td>\n      <td>Arts, creativity, complex problem solving, innovation<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Sense of justice<\/td>\n      <td>Scrupulous respect for rules, acute sensitivity to injustices<\/td>\n      <td>Civic education, class life, ethical projects<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n  <\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n\n<h2 id=\"idees-recues\">7. Seven misconceptions about autism deconstructed<\/h2>\n\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n  <div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception #1 \u2014 \"Autistic students do not want social contact\"<\/div>\n  <p>Most autistic students desire social relationships \u2014 they struggle to build and maintain them, not because they are disinterested, but because the implicit codes that govern these relationships are opaque to them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n  <div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n  <p>Isolation is often suffered, not chosen. An autistic student who eats alone in the cafeteria has not necessarily chosen solitude \u2014 he may have simply given up on decoding group dynamics that are too costly for him.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n<div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b02 \u2014 \"All autistic people are geniuses in math\"<\/div>\n  <p>The stereotype of the \"autistic genius\" (Rain Man, Sheldon Cooper) is both flattering and reductive. Autism is not correlated with a universal mathematical gift. Each autistic profile is unique \u2014 some autistic students are passionate about literature, history, or music.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n  <div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n  <p>What is often true is that autistic students can develop extraordinary expertise in their specific area of interest \u2014 whatever that area may be.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n  <div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b03 \u2014 \"If he has meltdowns, it's to get attention\"<\/div>\n  <p>Autistic meltdowns or shutdowns are not manipulative behaviors. They are the result of sensory, emotional, or cognitive overload that exceeds the student's regulation abilities.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n  <div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n  <p>A student in crisis needs help to unload, not punishment. Understanding the triggers of their meltdowns can often prevent them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n  <div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b04 \u2014 \"She can't be autistic \u2014 she's so sociable\"<\/div>\n  <p>This remark is almost always directed at girls. \"Masking\" \u2014 the conscious or unconscious hiding of autistic traits to appear neurotypical \u2014 is a very common strategy, particularly among autistic girls and women.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n  <div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n  <p>The ability to appear \"normal\" in public is exhausting and says nothing about whether a person is autistic or not. Shutdowns often occur in private spaces \u2014 at home, in the bathroom \u2014 precisely because masking stops.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n  <div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b05 \u2014 \"He could try harder to control himself\"<\/div>\n  <p>Autistic behaviors \u2014 stereotypies, difficulties with eye contact, reactions to sensory stimuli \u2014 are not choices. They are automatic neurological responses that are difficult, if not impossible, to suppress sustainably without considerable cost.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n  <div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n  <p>Asking an autistic student to \"control themselves\" in a situation of overload is comparable to asking a dyslexic student to \"read correctly\" under time pressure. Willpower has no effect on neurological mechanisms.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n  <div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b06 \u2014 \"Autism is always visible\"<\/div>\n  <p>Media representations of autism (very visible behaviors, non-verbal communication, total isolation) correspond to the most prominent forms of the spectrum. The vast majority of autistic students in regular middle and high school classes have much less visible profiles.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n  <div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n  <p>\"Invisible\" autism is the norm in regular schools. An autistic student can hold a conversation, make jokes, have friends \u2014 and exhibit all the characteristics of ASD in other dimensions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"error-box\">\n  <div class=\"error-box-title\">\u274c Misconception n\u00b07 \u2014 \"With good will, that's enough\"<\/div>\n  <p>Good will without training produces inconsistent accommodations, persistent misunderstandings, and avoidable crisis situations. Understanding autism requires specific training \u2014 not just good intentions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"error-fix\">\n<div class=\"error-fix-title\">\u2705 Reality<\/div>\n  <p>Goodwill is the necessary condition \u2014 training is the sufficient condition. It is their combination that produces truly effective support.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n<h2 id=\"impact\">8. Impact of autism on schooling: domain by domain<\/h2>\n\n<table class=\"comparison-table\">\n  <thead>\n    <tr>\n      <th>School domain<\/th>\n      <th>Impact of autistic characteristics<\/th>\n      <th>What the teacher observes<\/th>\n    <\/tr>\n  <\/thead>\n  <tbody>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Understanding instructions<\/td>\n      <td>Difficulty interpreting nuances and implicit expectations<\/td>\n      <td>The student responds to the letter of the instruction but not to the spirit; numerous questions to verify what is expected<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Group work<\/td>\n      <td>Difficulty negotiating roles, managing disagreements, adapting to changes in plans<\/td>\n      <td>Isolation, recurring conflicts, rigidity on content or method<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Understanding literary texts<\/td>\n      <td>Difficulty with implicit meaning, metaphor, irony, characters' intentions<\/td>\n      <td>Correct literal understanding, difficult symbolic interpretation<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Written expression<\/td>\n      <td>Difficulty adopting the reader's perspective, structuring nuanced arguments<\/td>\n      <td>Very factual or very detailed texts, lack of narrative \"link\"<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Oral assessments<\/td>\n      <td>Anxiety in public exposure, pragmatic difficulties (adapting speech to the audience)<\/td>\n      <td>Blocking or monologue, difficulty responding to follow-up questions<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Organization and planning<\/td>\n      <td>Executive functions often weakened: agenda, priorities, time management<\/td>\n      <td>Forgotten homework, missing materials, late submissions without visible bad will<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>Transitions and changes<\/td>\n      <td>Strong need for predictability; unannounced changes deeply destabilize<\/td>\n      <td>Disproportionate reactions to changes in room, schedule, or teacher<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n    <tr>\n      <td>PE and arts<\/td>\n      <td>Possible difficulties with activities that have a strong social component (team sports); strengths in individual activities<\/td>\n      <td>Avoidance of team sports, possible excellence in individual activities (swimming, athletics, visual arts)<\/td>\n    <\/tr>\n  <\/tbody>\n<\/table>\n\n<h2 id=\"adaptations\">9. Fundamental adaptations: what every teacher can do<\/h2>\n\n<p>Without waiting for a formal diagnosis, without an official accommodation plan, without a specific device \u2014 every teacher can implement simple adaptations that make a significant difference for the autistic students in their class. These adaptations also benefit all students, not just autistic students.<\/p>\n\n<ul class=\"numbered-list\">\n  <li><strong>Make expectations explicit and concrete.<\/strong> Never assume that an expectation is \"obvious.\" What the instruction expects, how the work should be submitted, what will be evaluated, how much time is available: everything must be clearly stated, preferably in writing. Vague or implicit instructions (\"do something interesting\") are a major source of anxiety for autistic students.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Announce changes in advance.<\/strong> Canceled class, changed room, rescheduled assessment, replaced teacher: any modification to the usual routine must be announced as early as possible. Ideally in writing (message to families, note on the board at the beginning of the week). An autistic student informed of a change can prepare mentally. An autistic student surprised by a change may become overwhelmed.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Create stable course rituals.<\/strong> A course opening always in the same format (write the date and title, remind the session's agenda, announce the objectives), a course closing always structured the same way (summary, homework, materials to take): these stable rituals are safety anchors for autistic students and impose no constraints on others.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Tolerate and understand stereotypies.<\/strong> A student who rocks, taps on their table, manipulates an object, gets up regularly: these behaviors are not disinterest or agitation \u2014 they are often strategies for sensory or emotional regulation. Tolerating them (within reasonable limits) reduces overload and improves the student's cognitive availability.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Offer alternatives to group work.<\/strong> For students who have major difficulties with group dynamics, offering an alternative (individual work with the same level of demand, specific role in the group that corresponds to their strengths) avoids recurrent failure situations without taking away from the educational requirements.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Provide spaces for decompression.<\/strong> Recess is often for the autistic student a moment of intense social overload \u2014 not a moment of recovery. Allowing them to access a quiet space during transitions (library, quiet corner) can significantly reduce their overall cognitive load throughout the day.<\/li>\n  <li><strong>Value specific interests as entry points into learning.<\/strong> If a student is passionate about trains, meteorology, or manga, using this area as an example in an explanation or as a topic for free work multiplies their engagement and motivation \u2014 and shows them that their universe is legitimate.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n\n<h2 id=\"cas-pratiques\">10. Practical cases: autism in secondary school in real situations<\/h2>\n<div class=\"case-study\">\n  <div class=\"case-study-header\">\n    <div class=\"case-study-emoji\">&#x1F4DA;<\/div>\n    <div>\n      <div class=\"case-study-label\">Case study \u2014 10th grade, general high school<\/div>\n      <div class=\"case-study-title\">Th\u00e9o, 15 years old: the \"weird gifted\" who is not gifted<\/div>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/div>\n  <p>Th\u00e9o arrives in 10th grade with an erratic school record: 18 in physics, 5 in French, 15 in history, 4 in PE. His teachers perceive him as intelligent but unpredictable \u2014 brilliant when the subject interests him, nonexistent otherwise. He eats alone, speaks little, answers questions in a very detailed and technical manner. He has been monitored for \"school anxiety\" since 5th grade.<\/p>\n  <p>His main teacher, trained in ASD, recognizes the profile. She guides the family towards an assessment that confirms level 1 ASD without associated intellectual disability. With the team, she implements: instructions always written on the board, a 24-hour notice for any program changes, tolerance for his manipulation object in class (a small ball), substitution of group work with optional individual work.<\/p>\n  <div class=\"case-study-result\">\n    <p>&#x2705; <strong>Result:<\/strong> Crises in class almost completely disappear. His grades in French rise to 11 \u2014 not due to an improvement in his style, but thanks to much more precise writing instructions that finally allow him to know what is expected of him. He advances to scientific 11th grade and considers an engineering school.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"case-study\">\n  <div class=\"case-study-header\">\n    <div class=\"case-study-emoji\">&#x1F9B8;&#x200D;&#x2640;&#xFE0F;<\/div>\n    <div>\n      <div class=\"case-study-label\">Case study \u2014 8th grade, middle school<\/div>\n      <div class=\"case-study-title\">Camille, 13 years old: the perfect masking until the collapse<\/div>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/div>\n  <p>Camille is a student appreciated by all adults. Smiling, polite, good student (12-13 average), with no disciplinary incidents. But starting in November, her parents report daily collapses at home \u2014 screaming, crying, inability to do her homework, refusal to go out on weekends. At school, nothing seems wrong. Her school counselor, trained in ASD during a workshop, notices that she always eats in the same place, systematically avoids noise, and seems exhausted by the end of the day.<\/p>\n  <p>A neuropsychological assessment confirms ASD with an intense masking profile. The team learns that Camille \"plays a role\" from morning to night to appear normal \u2014 and that the evening collapse is the release of six hours of cognitive and social overload. The adaptations put in place: access to a quiet room during one out of two breaks, reduction of mandatory oral participation, prior notice of group work.<\/p>\n  <div class=\"case-study-result\">\n    <p>&#x2705; <strong>Result:<\/strong> Collapses at home significantly decrease in four weeks. Camille, met three months later, says: \"Before, I was dying every day and no one knew. Now I just have the right to be tired.\"<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<div class=\"case-study\">\n  <div class=\"case-study-header\">\n    <div class=\"case-study-emoji\">&#x1F4A1;<\/div>\n    <div>\n      <div class=\"case-study-label\">Case study \u2014 Middle school, entire team<\/div>\n<div class=\"case-study-title\">When a training day changes the perspective of an entire institution<\/div>\n    <\/div>\n  <\/div>\n  <p>A college with 420 students organizes a DYNSEO training day on autism. At the end of the morning, during a workshop on warning signs, five different teachers spontaneously mention the same student \u2014 a 9th-grade boy whom each perceives through the lens of their discipline (the \"bad at sports,\" the \"too literal in French,\" the \"history obsessed,\" the \"difficult in groups\"). None had ever made the connection. Together, they build a profile that very precisely matches the criteria for ASD.<\/p>\n  <div class=\"case-study-result\">\n    <p>&#x2705; <strong>Impact:<\/strong> The student is referred for an assessment that confirms the ASD at 15 years old \u2014 after nine years of schooling without understanding his profile. His mother, upon learning the diagnosis, cries and says: \"Finally, I understand his entire childhood.\" The college team sets up an urgent accommodation plan for the end of 9th grade. The training cost one day. It had taken nine years not to have done it.<\/p>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<p>Autism in middle and high school is a daily reality that affects every class, every institution, every educational team. Understanding the autistic profile \u2014 its mechanisms, its diversity, its strengths, and its challenges \u2014 is the first step towards support that allows these students to reveal their true abilities rather than expend their energy just surviving in an environment designed for brains that function differently from theirs. The following seven articles in this series delve into each dimension of this support.<\/p>\n\n<div class=\"cta-box\">\n  <h3>&#x1F393; Train your team on autism in middle and high school<\/h3>\n  <p>The DYNSEO training \"Autism in middle and high school\" gives each team member the keys to understand the autistic profile and adapt their practices. Qualiopi certified \u2014 eligible for funding \u2014 in-person or hybrid.<\/p>\n  <div class=\"cta-buttons\">\n    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/courses\/autism-au-college-et-au-lycee-comprendre-le-profil-autistique-et-adapter-ses-pratiques\/\" class=\"btn-cta-white\">&#x1F4CB; View the program<\/a>\n    <a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/formations\/\" class=\"btn-cta-outline\">All trainings &#x2192;<\/a>\n  <\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n<a href=\"https:\/\/www.dynseo.com\/courses\/autism-au-college-et-au-lycee-comprendre-le-profil-autistique-et-adapter-ses-pratiques\/\" class=\"internal-link\">\n  <div class=\"internal-link-icon\">&#x1F9E0;<\/div>\n  <div class=\"internal-link-content\">\n    <div class=\"internal-link-label\">Qualiopi certified training<\/div>\n    <div class=\"internal-link-title\">Autism in middle and high school: understanding the autistic profile and adapting practices<\/div>\n    <div class=\"internal-link-desc\">The complete training for all secondary teams \u2014 from recognizing signs to implementing adaptations.<\/div>\n  <\/div>\n  <div class=\"internal-link-arrow\">&#x2192;<\/div>\n<\/a>\n\n<div class=\"article-tags\">\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">autism middle high school guide<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">ASD secondary teachers<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">adolescent autistic profile<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">autism spectrum disorder school<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">autism masking high school<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">pedagogical adaptations autism<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">autism training Qualiopi<\/a>\n  <a href=\"#\" class=\"article-tag\">DYNSEO autism training<\/a>\n<\/div>\n\n<\/article>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<\/div>[\/et_pb_code][\/et_pb_column][\/et_pb_row][\/et_pb_section]","_et_gb_content_width":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[2915],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-709317","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-les-conseils-des-coachs"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.8 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Autism in Middle and High School: Complete Guide to Understanding the Autistic Profile | DYNSEO - DYNSEO - Educational apps &amp; 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