Eye contact challenges are common in autism, but with patient, respectful strategies, many children can develop more comfortable eye contact over time. The goal is not perfect eye contact but functional social engagement.
Why Eye Contact Is Difficult
For many autistic children, eye contact feels physically uncomfortable, creates sensory overload, or interferes with their ability to process information. Forcing eye contact can cause distress and damage trust.
Respectful Strategies
- Position yourself at eye level: Get down to the child s level rather than towering over them
- Use motivation: Hold preferred items near your eyes to naturally draw gaze
- Reinforce any look: Praise or reward brief glances toward your face
- Make eye contact rewarding: Pair looking at faces with fun activities and positive interactions
- Accept approximations: Looking toward the face, even without direct eye contact, is progress
What Not to Do
Never physically force a child s head toward you or withhold needs until they make eye contact. These approaches are counterproductive and harmful.
ABA therapy uses positive, individualized strategies for social skills. Contact Treetop ABA Therapy.
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