Building Real Social Connections (Not Forced Friendships)

Season #2

In this episode of Teaching Autism & Special Education with Nikki, we’re talking about social connection, and why it’s time to move away from forced friendships and one-size-fits-all “social skills.”

Because real connection isn’t about making students interact the right way.
It’s about helping them feel safe, respected, and free to connect on their own terms.

This episode explores what authentic social connection actually looks like for autistic and neurodivergent learners, and how we can support it without pressure, scripts, or shame.

In this episode, we talk about:

  • Why traditional ideas of friendship don’t fit every student

  • What real friendship can look like (and why it’s often quieter than we expect)

  • Why forced interaction and “go play with your friends” can backfire

  • How consent should be the foundation of all social teaching

  • Teaching students how to say yes, no, and maybe later.. and honoring all of it

  • Why comfort comes before conversation

  • How parallel play and shared space build safety

  • Using student interests as natural bridges for connection

  • Why modeling social interaction matters more than drilling it

  • Low-pressure ways to scaffold social moments

  • Supporting communication differences in social settings

  • Why not all connection needs words

  • Teaching social routines instead of scripted conversations

  • Normalizing different friendship styles in your classroom

  • Helping students repair social moments without blame

  • Celebrating small, meaningful connections

  • Partnering with families around realistic social expectations

Big takeaways:

  • Friendship doesn’t have to look loud or busy to be real

  • Consent builds safer, stronger social connections

  • Comfort and trust come before interaction

  • Parallel play is valid connection

  • Real inclusion honors differences, it doesn’t erase them

If you’ve ever felt uncomfortable pushing students into interactions they clearly weren’t ready for ... or wondered if you were “doing social skills wrong” - this episode will feel like a deep exhale.