Lwaxy
Cute but dangerous
Is it really that hard to get a diagnosis of Autism in Europe? It isn't in the UK, so I'm surprised to hear that. As for self-diagnosis, there are so many problems with it that it's a whole other thread in another forum. It does as much harm as good, that's for sure. Being aware of conditions like Autism or dyscalculia (which are not connected, particularly, I note - though ADD/ADHD is connected to dyscalculia) is quite different from deciding you have them and going around telling people that you do. Avoiding diagnosis (usually by finding excuses, in my experience) is detrimental in that it prevents you from being provided with access to a lot of really useful stuff (whether tools, medication or other forms of support - particularly in Western Europe, where non-neurotypical stuff isn't stigmatized as much as the rest of the world).
Complete tangent but I think one particular issue with self-diagnosis in the last five-six years is that a lot of people who had no real Autism symptoms beyond "poor social skills" self-diagnosed, made it part of their identity and so on, and as they get older, at least some of those people are realizing that they just had, y'know, poor social skills (and now have better ones, as age often brings), but are now in a situation where they announced to everyone that they had a very specific disability... Not great for anyone involved.
There would be a waiting list longer than 3 years for a diagnosis from one of the 2 or 3 "qualified" psychatrists. Recently, they opened up 2 more places not too far away, but even there, you need to wait for months. And that is bad in more than one way, because myself, as many Aspies, I can't plan that far ahead. I have trouble scheduling ahead for conventions and game meetups, or for work needing to be done in our house, or even my cancer followups. If I have issues with stuff that's fun for me or is something I really want or need done, I can't in any way manage to keep track of stuff that is that far ahead and does not really help me that much.
What my doctors did was to just enter it in my file and not bother with all the hassle. To anyone who knows about it, it's very obvious I'm on spectrum. The only issue with not having an insurance-official diagnosis until now is not getting single rooms in hospitals without raising trouble. They comply once they find no one can bear living in the same room with me, or when I get a breakdown. Which unfortunately always happens.
I've had to self-diagnose several things, for me and others. Not once been wrong. But then, I don't just buy into checklists online. I find out what it is and then ask a doctor to confirm

As to tech in education, my niece told me today that in the two classes she has where everyone is using a laptop now, no one ever seems to look at the teacher anymore, and she finds that rather disturbing. some of her classmates don't even remember who of their 3 or 4 teachers for those classesdid the actual lesson. I'm not a fan of that, either. Glad not to be a student in today's world.