Amazing K FAQ

Social Communication

These are common questions parents ask when they are concerned about their child’s social communication, play skills, interaction with peers and behaviour in preschool or crèche environments.

 

The answers below explore concerns such as playing alone, eye contact, imitation, lining up toys, intense interests and difficulty coping in early childhood environments.

Parent Questions

Social communication is about more than simply being around other children.

Group play, imitation, flexibility, shared attention and participation can all provide important insight into a child’s developmental profile.

Frequently Asked Questions

My child prefers to play alone. Is this a sign of autism?

Not necessarily.

 

A child who prefers to play alone is not automatically autistic. The answer often depends on the child’s age, developmental stage and overall communication skills.

 

In very young children, particularly toddlers, solitary play is a normal part of development. A two-year-old may play alongside other children without actively engaging with them. This is often referred to as parallel play and is a typical stage of early childhood development.

 

As children get older, however, we expect to see increasing interest in cooperative play, shared activities and social interaction with peers. If a preschool-aged child consistently struggles to engage with other children, it may be worth exploring further.

 

One of the biggest misconceptions about autism is that autistic children do not enjoy being around other people. In our experience, this is often not the case. Many autistic children enjoy being part of a group and are happy to be around other children. The challenge is frequently understanding the unwritten social rules that make group play work.

 

Group play requires children to understand things such as taking turns, following the group’s ideas, sharing attention, adapting when the game changes and understanding what other children expect from them. These skills do not always develop naturally for autistic children.

 

When observing young autistic children on a playground, it is common to see them sharing the same space as their peers but engaging in very different activities. One child may spend time on the slide, another may carry a favourite object, while another may be exploring the environment in their own way. This does not necessarily mean they dislike other children. Rather, they may be interacting with the environment differently or having difficulty joining a shared activity.

 

For this reason, professionals look at far more than whether a child plays alone. We consider their communication skills, ability to engage with peers, understanding of social interaction, play skills and overall development.

 

If your child consistently struggles to join group activities, understand social play or engage with other children, it may be worthwhile seeking a developmental assessment.

Can a child have autism if they make eye contact?

Absolutely.

 

One of the biggest misconceptions about autism is that autistic children do not make eye contact. In reality, many autistic children make eye contact, and some make very good eye contact.

 

In our experience, eye contact can vary enormously from one child to another. Some autistic children avoid eye contact, some make fleeting eye contact, and others make strong and consistent eye contact. We have even worked with children whose eye contact is so intense that it feels more like a stare than a brief social glance.

 

For this reason, eye contact alone is not a reliable way of determining whether a child is autistic or not.

 

When professionals assess a child for autism, they look at a much broader picture. They consider how the child communicates, responds to other people, uses gestures, engages in conversation, participates in play, adapts to change, and interacts with the world around them.

 

A child who makes excellent eye contact may still have significant difficulties with communication, social interaction, and flexibility. Equally, a child who struggles with eye contact is not automatically autistic.

 

At Amazing K, we encourage parents not to focus on any single characteristic in isolation. Autism is a complex developmental condition, and no individual behaviour can confirm or rule out a diagnosis on its own.

 

If you have concerns about your child’s communication, social development or behaviour, it is always best to look at the overall developmental picture rather than relying on one sign alone.

My child does not imitate me. Should I be concerned?

Imitation is one of the most important developmental skills in early childhood because children learn so much by watching and copying the people around them.

 

Through imitation, children learn how to communicate, play, interact with others, and eventually participate in classroom activities. Many early learning experiences depend on a child’s ability to observe what another person is doing and then attempt to do the same.

 

If your child is consistently struggling to imitate simple actions, it is worth investigating further. Difficulties with imitation are commonly associated with autism and other developmental differences. However, imitation difficulties on their own do not automatically mean a child is autistic.

 

One of the most important things to consider is the child’s age and developmental stage. Expectations for imitation change significantly as children grow. Early imitation may be as simple as waving goodbye, clapping hands, giving a high five, or copying a simple gesture.

 

As children get older, imitation becomes more complex and may involve following actions, participating in games such as Simon Says, copying play activities, or learning new skills by watching others.

 

At Amazing K, we often encourage parents to look beyond the imitation itself and consider what may be happening beneath the surface. Before a child can imitate an action, they need to notice it, pay attention to it, understand what is being asked of them, and process the information. If any of these steps are difficult, imitation may also become difficult.

 

For example, a child who is distracted by their environment, struggling to sustain attention, or having difficulty understanding language may appear unable to imitate when the real challenge lies elsewhere.

 

This is why developmental professionals rarely assess imitation in isolation. We also look at communication, attention, language processing, social interaction, and overall development.

 

If your child is consistently struggling to imitate age-appropriate actions, it is worth seeking further guidance. While imitation difficulties can be associated with autism, they can also provide valuable insight into how a child learns, processes information, and engages with the world around them.

My child lines up toys. Is that autism?

Not necessarily.

 

Many children line up toys at some point during their development, and lining up toys on its own does not mean a child is autistic.

 

What is often more important is understanding how, when and why the behaviour occurs.

 

For example, does the child occasionally line up toys as part of their play, or do they feel compelled to do it every time they play? Do they become upset if somebody moves the toys? Do they struggle to play with the toys in any other way? Is lining up objects becoming the primary way they interact with their environment?

 

These are the types of questions professionals consider when assessing a child’s development.

 

Lining up toys can sometimes be part of a broader pattern of repetitive or restricted behaviours. In autistic children, these behaviours may extend beyond toys and can include a strong preference for routines, resistance to change, repeated viewing of the same television programmes, highly focused interests, repetitive play patterns, or a need for things to remain the same.

 

However, it is important to remember that autism is never diagnosed based on a single behaviour. Autism affects multiple areas of development, including communication, social interaction, play skills, flexibility and learning. For this reason, lining up toys must always be considered within the context of the child’s overall development.

 

At Amazing K, we encourage parents to look at the bigger picture. If a child lines up toys occasionally but is communicating well, interacting socially, adapting to change and developing typically in other areas, there is usually little reason for concern.

 

If, however, the lining up of toys occurs alongside speech delays, communication difficulties, social challenges, repetitive behaviours or strong resistance to change, it may be worth seeking a developmental assessment.

 

The question is often not whether a child lines up toys, but whether the behaviour forms part of a broader pattern of developmental differences.

My child only wants to play with one thing. Should I be worried?

Not necessarily.

 

Most children go through phases where they develop strong preferences for certain toys, activities, characters or objects. A favourite train, blanket, doll, animal or toy can be a completely normal part of childhood development.

 

Many parents become concerned when a child seems interested in only one thing. However, it is important to look beyond the object itself and consider the child’s overall behaviour and development.

 

At Amazing K, we often encourage parents to ask a different question:

 

Is it the interest itself that concerns us, or is it the child’s flexibility around that interest?

 

A young child may love trains, animals, cars or a favourite television character. Having a strong interest is not the same as having autism. In fact, many children develop intense interests as they learn about the world around them.

 

Children are naturally drawn to things they understand, enjoy and find predictable. Sometimes a favourite toy simply provides comfort, familiarity or enjoyment. It does not automatically indicate a developmental concern.

 

What professionals look for is whether the interest becomes unusually restrictive. For example:

  • Does the child become extremely distressed if the item is unavailable?
  • Are they willing to engage with other toys and activities?
  • Can they tolerate changes to their routine or play?
  • Are they able to talk about or participate in other topics?
  • Does the interest interfere with everyday learning, social interaction or family life?

In autistic children, strong interests can sometimes form part of a broader pattern of restricted and repetitive behaviours. However, the interest itself is rarely the most important factor. What matters more is how rigidly the child relies on it and how difficult it is for them to engage with anything else.

 

We also find that adults sometimes unintentionally reinforce a child’s favourite interest. If a child loves trains, for example, family members may naturally buy more trains, watch train videos and talk about trains, which can make the interest appear even stronger.

 

Similarly, some children enjoy watching the same video repeatedly or replaying the same scene. In these situations, it is often not the content itself that provides useful information, but rather the child’s response when access to it is interrupted or altered.

 

As with many developmental concerns, this behaviour should never be viewed in isolation. Strong interests become more meaningful when they occur alongside communication difficulties, speech delays, social challenges, repetitive behaviours or a strong need for sameness.

 

The question is often not whether a child has a favourite interest, but whether that interest forms part of a broader pattern of developmental differences.

Why do autistic children often struggle in preschool or crèche environments?

Many autistic children find traditional preschool or crèche environments challenging, but the reasons are not always what parents expect.

 

It is important to understand that the difficulty is often not a child’s willingness to learn or participate. More commonly, there is a mismatch between what the environment requires and what the child is developmentally ready to manage.

 

Traditional early childhood environments are often busy, noisy and highly stimulating. Classrooms may contain large groups of children, bright displays, constant movement, multiple activities, and significant sensory input. While many children adapt well to these environments, some autistic children find them overwhelming.

 

Communication can also become a challenge. A child who struggles to understand language, express themselves, or follow instructions may experience significant anxiety throughout the school day. When a child cannot easily communicate their needs, frustrations can quickly build.

 

Play is another area that is often misunderstood. Preschools place a strong emphasis on social play, group participation, and learning through interaction with peers. However, many autistic children struggle not because they dislike other children, but because they find the unwritten social rules of play difficult to understand.

 

Difficulties with attention, imitation, body control, fine motor skills, and group participation can also make classroom activities challenging. Tasks such as sitting on the mat, participating in circle time, cutting, colouring, following routines and transitioning between activities may require skills that are still developing.

 

In some situations, a child’s behaviour may escalate because the adults around them misunderstand the underlying developmental challenge. If communication difficulties are not recognised, behaviours can unintentionally become the child’s most effective way of expressing discomfort, frustration or anxiety.

 

At Amazing K, we often find that anxiety sits at the heart of many school-related difficulties. A child who does not fully understand what is happening around them, cannot communicate effectively, struggles to participate in group activities and feels overwhelmed by their environment is likely to experience a great deal of stress throughout the day.

 

This does not mean that the child cannot learn. It simply means that they may need a different approach to early childhood development.

 

Many autistic children benefit from environments that focus first on communication, social understanding, emotional regulation, body awareness, independence and developmental readiness before placing heavy emphasis on academic expectations.

 

The goal is not simply to prepare a child for the next grade in school. The goal is to help the child develop the foundational skills that allow learning, communication and participation to take place successfully.

Concerned About Social Communication?

Look at the overall developmental picture.

At Amazing K, we encourage parents not to focus on any single characteristic in isolation. Autism is a complex developmental condition, and no individual behaviour can confirm or rule out a diagnosis on its own.

Contact Amazing K