Building Inclusive Schools in Bangladesh
Learn how to use routines, language, and leadership practices to create predictable, autism-friendly school environments.
Autism Guide — Understanding in the Classroom
What Autism Is — and What It Isn’t — For Bangladeshi Teachers
Many teachers in Bangladesh teach autistic learners every day without realising it. Autism is not rare, and it does not belong only to specialist schools or high-income countries. It exists in government schools, English-medium schools, madrasas, NGO schools, rural classrooms, and urban classrooms.
At the same time, many children who struggle in class are not autistic. They may be anxious, tired, under pressure, under-taught, or coping with challenges at home. This guide is therefore not a way to “spot autism” or “decide who is autistic.” It is a guide to help teachers:
It is about better practice, not diagnosis. For an overview of the national picture, you can return to Autism in the Bangladesh Context.
Throughout this chapter you will see examples such as:
These are illustrative scenarios. They are designed to help you imagine what autistic traits can look like in Bangladeshi classrooms.
They are not checklists. A child who does one (or even several) of these things is
not automatically autistic. Students may:
– show these behaviours and be autistic
– show these behaviours and not be autistic
– be autistic and show none of these behaviours in obvious ways
Your role is not to label. Your role is to understand, adapt, and support.
Autism is a neurodevelopmental difference in how a person:
Autistic learners do not choose these differences. Their brain processes the world differently, which can make typical classroom expectations confusing, overwhelming, or unpredictable.
However, some non-autistic students may also have difficulties in these areas for other reasons. The teaching strategies in this guide will help them too.
Class 4, government school, 52 students.
The teacher gives instructions verbally:
“Open your books, go to page 27, copy the first paragraph, then complete the exercise.”
Most students begin. One child sits still, not moving. Another flips pages erratically. A third begins copying the wrong section.
What the teacher sees: “They are not listening.”
What may actually be happening:
This pattern is common for autistic learners, but it can also occur in students with language difficulties, anxiety, or limited prior knowledge.
What matters is not “Is this child autistic?”
What matters is “How can I make my instructions clearer and more manageable for everyone?”
Misunderstandings lead to stigma and to punishment that harms children unintentionally. Autism is not:
Autistic learners are not trying to be difficult. Many are trying very hard to cope in environments not designed for them.
At the same time, not every child who struggles is autistic. We must avoid two errors:
Our job is to understand and adjust, not diagnose.
A Class 2 student repeatedly leaves his seat, wanders, and touches objects on shelves.
Common interpretation:
“He is being naughty.”
“His parents don’t discipline him.”
Possible underlying reasons (autism or not):
Whether or not he is autistic, he needs support, not just sanctions.
Autism is often described through four broad areas of difference. These areas are not exclusive to autism, but they tend to be consistently present in autistic learners.
Use these areas to guide your understanding and your teaching—not to form a diagnosis.
The four areas are:
Autistic students may:
Non-autistic students can also show these behaviours, especially if they are learning in an additional language, anxious, or shy. The strategies that help one group will usually help the other.
Teacher: “Why didn’t you bring your homework?”
Student: silent, staring at the floor
Quick misinterpretation: disobedient, disrespectful.
Possible meanings (autistic or not):
Teaching-practice response:
“Take a moment. I’ll ask you again after I check the other table.”
You have not diagnosed anything. You have simply given space and preserved dignity.
Autistic learners often:
Again, some non-autistic students show similar behaviours due to personality, language barriers, or previous social experiences.
During group work, a student says loudly:
“You’re doing it wrong! Give it to me.”
The group complain: “Sir, he’s being rude!”
Common reading: rude, bossy.
Possible meanings:
Whether or not this student is autistic, they benefit from:
This is explored more in Classroom Strategies → Social & Peer Interaction.
Many autistic learners experience sights, sounds, smells, textures, and movement more intensely (or less intensely) than others. Some non-autistic learners do too.
Assembly time. The microphone screeches. Students chatter.
One child starts crying and covering their ears.
Quick misinterpretation: overreacting, attention-seeking.
Possible meanings (autistic or not):
You do not need to decide “autism or not” to respond helpfully. You can:
Small environmental changes, explored further in Structured Teaching & Sensory Supports, can dramatically reduce distress.
Executive functioning supports tasks like planning, organising, starting work, and switching between activities. Many autistic learners struggle here—as do many non-autistic learners with ADHD, anxiety, or other challenges.
Teacher: “Everyone, quickly put away your maths books and take out your English books.”
Most students move. One child stays still, staring at the desk.
Quick misinterpretation: stubborn, slow, “dreaming.”
Possible meanings:
Supportive teaching response:
“First, close your maths book. Then put it in your bag. Then take out your English book.”
This step-by-step guidance helps all learners, not just those who are autistic.
A crucial idea in this guide is:
Every behaviour is communication,
but no single behaviour is proof of autism.
A meltdown, shutdown, laugh, refusal, or “overreaction” always tells you something — about the task, the environment, the child’s emotional state, or their past experiences. But it does not tell you, on its own, that the child is autistic.
A Class 5 child pushes a desk loudly and refuses to write.
Traditional reaction: “He’s lazy and misbehaving.”
Alternative understanding (autistic or not):
Punishing the behaviour without exploring the cause often increases distress and repeats the pattern. Understanding the communication underneath allows you to adjust the task, the environment, or your support.
Your job is to notice patterns and remove barriers, not to decide who is autistic.
When a behaviour concerns you, ask:
If a pattern continues and significantly affects learning or wellbeing, you can:
These examples support understanding without implying diagnosis.
Instead of:
“Why are you not listening?”
Try:
“I think that was a lot of information. Let me repeat it in smaller steps.”
Instead of:
“Stop overreacting!”
Try:
“The noise feels too much, doesn’t it? Let’s see where you can sit more comfortably.”
Instead of:
“You should know this by now.”
Try:
“Let’s break this into smaller parts and do the first step together.”
These phrases work whether or not a student is autistic. They are simply good teaching.
Use this as a thinking tool, not a diagnosis chart.
In every case, the question is:
“What could this behaviour be telling me — and what small change can I make to help?”
You will see many of these patterns in your classroom. Some of the students who show them will be autistic. Some will not.
You do not need to decide which is which in order to teach inclusively.
Your role is to:
The rest of this guide will show, step by step, how to adapt teaching, routines, and school culture so that autistic learners — and all learners — can feel safe, understood, and able to learn.