One of the most expensive mistakes in autism support is not poor effort. It is poor prioritization.
Families and professionals often inherit a pile of possible goals:
- speech
- behavior
- play
- school readiness
- social skills
- routines
- academics
- independence
The problem is that a long goal list is not the same thing as a smart sequence.
A good goal changes more than one thing
The strongest goals do not only improve one narrow performance. They create leverage.
A high-leverage goal often does at least one of these:
- reduces a major daily-life bottleneck
- unlocks other learning opportunities
- makes communication more useful
- reduces dependence on adult rescue
- travels across routines and settings
That is why “learn ten picture labels” is often weaker than “ask for help,” “wait briefly,” or “tolerate a transition with support.” The first may look academic. The second changes daily life.
Ask what makes life harder than it needs to be
Before writing goals, identify the live friction points.
Examples:
- the child cannot get help without crying
- transitions trigger repeated distress
- group instruction falls apart immediately
- the child waits for adult cues instead of initiating
- routines only work with constant prompting
Those problems often point toward better goals than generic lists do.
Use three filters before you commit to a goal
1. Is it functional?
Will this skill matter outside a teaching moment?
2. Is it foundational?
Will this make later skills easier to teach?
3. Is it teachable now?
Is the child close enough to the target that progress is realistic without overload?
If a goal fails all three filters, it is probably attractive but badly timed.
Common examples of high-leverage goals
Depending on the child, strong early or mid-stage goals often include:
- functional requests and refusals
- shared attention and initiation
- imitation
- prompt fading and independent starts
- transition tolerance
- group participation
- everyday independence steps
These are not glamorous goals. That is part of why they get skipped. But they often change more than people expect.
Common examples of weakly chosen goals
Weak goals are not always useless. They are often just poorly timed.
Examples include:
- long label lists with little real-life use
- advanced language forms before functional communication is reliable
- school tasks before group readiness exists
- surface compliance goals that increase adult control but not independence
A child can look “busy” while the real bottleneck stays untouched.
Good planning sounds like this
Better teams ask:
- What is the missing skill under the problem?
- What goal would make the biggest difference this month?
- What can be practiced in real routines, not only in therapy?
- What will matter across home, school, and community life?
That is the difference between a large plan and a useful one.
Read next
If your team struggles to stay aligned around priorities, read How to Build a Good Autism Support Team.
If you want the full book-level system for prioritizing goals across development, it lives in The Autism Skills Handbook.