Communication

Functional Communication Before Complex Speech

A practical guide to why useful communication should come before polished speech goals in autism support.

8 min read Based on Chapter 10 Published March 25, 2026
Parent and child working together in a calm living-room routine.

One of the costliest mistakes in autism support is waiting for communication to look sophisticated before treating it as important.

Adults wait for clear speech, longer phrases, or neat answers to adult questions.

Meanwhile the child still cannot reliably:

  • ask for help
  • refuse
  • request more
  • say finished
  • ask for a break
  • get someone’s attention

When those functions are weak, behavior often carries the load instead.

The real standard is simple

Communication must change what happens next.

If a child communicates and nothing useful changes, motivation drops. If the child signals clearly and the environment responds, communication gets stronger.

That principle matters more than whether the first form is perfect.

Function comes before polish

Speech can be valuable. So can signs, gestures, pictures, symbols, and devices.

The practical early question is not:

“Is this the ideal form forever?”

It is:

“Can the child use this form clearly, often, and with real effect in daily life?”

When the answer is yes, you are building communication.

Start with messages that reduce friction

High-value early messages often include:

  • help
  • more
  • open
  • stop
  • no
  • finished
  • break
  • want
  • different
  • look

These are strong targets because they solve live problems now, not someday.

They reduce guesswork. They lower frustration. They build initiation. They make routines easier.

Requesting is important, but not enough

Many programs stall because they teach only requests for preferred items.

Children also need ways to:

  • protest appropriately
  • reject what they do not want
  • request help
  • stop an activity
  • signal discomfort
  • share attention

If communication only works for snacks and toys, the system is still too shallow for real life.

Choose the form by fit, not ideology

Different children need different communication mixes.

Good selection usually asks whether the form is:

  1. understandable to other people
  2. low enough effort to use in real conditions
  3. available when needed
  4. teachable across settings and adults
  5. expandable over time

That is more useful than arguing about one morally correct method.

If you are deciding whether AAC will help or hurt speech, read Does AAC Stop Speech?.

If you want the broader communication sequence and message priorities, the full system lives in the book.

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This cluster shifts readers away from speech appearance and toward usable communication that reduces friction in daily life.

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