SilverPikmin wrote:
You say you don't really speak the language--maybe you'd notice any disorders if you knew what the children were talking about? Mental disorders will not be as obvious as physical ones, and you might not notice them even if you can understand their speech.
I assume there will be less people diagnosed with autism in China, of course. If autism is mostly genetic that shouldn't reflect a difference in the rate though.
That is a good point, I was mostly looking at the body language of the children, etc. Nonverbal things.
I can't remember exactly where, but I'm pretty sure that we already had the discussion about different cultures valuing different traits, and came to the conclusion that a kid on the spectrum in China will still act different from his/her peers.
I'd assume almost nobody gets diagnosed with autism in the part of China where I was. This was very rural (pretty much everybody in that whole part of the country is a rice farmer) and I doubt anyone could even know where to go for something like that.
I mostly focused on looking at their body language
in comparison to the others. There were about ten of us there, so I looked a lot at how the kids were interacting with my classmates (when we brought out paper and pencils, what did they draw, when they were playing group activities, how involved were they, etc) (in case anybody was wondering, every single child drew a picture of them and a farm).