Masking in the Classroom
In this episode of Teaching Autism and Special Education with Nikki, we’re exploring masking in the classroom and why a student looking “fine” on the surface does not always mean they feel safe, regulated, or understood underneath. We unpack what masking actually is, why autistic students often do it, and how behaviors like forced eye contact, suppressing stims, copying peers, staying silent, or pretending to understand can become survival strategies in school environments. While masking can sometimes look like success or compliance, it often comes at a huge emotional and cognitive cost. We also dive into the hidden signs of masking that educators may easily miss, including rigid posture, exhaustion, emotional shutdowns, after school meltdowns, and students who appear calm but are working incredibly hard internally just to “hold it together.” I talk about the difference between true regulation and masking, and why rewarding quietness, stillness, or invisibility can unintentionally teach students that their natural autistic traits are unacceptable. This episode is packed with practical, neuro affirming shifts schools can make to reduce masking pressure and create safer classrooms for autistic learners. We discuss normalizing movement, reducing verbal overload, not forcing eye contact, using visual supports, checking in privately, and celebrating authentic communication instead of silent compliance. Instead of asking, “They’re doing fine, aren’t they?” this episode encourages us to ask, “Are they genuinely regulated, or are they simply surviving the environment?” That shift can completely change how we support our students.

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