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Autism and Communication

Useful for communication pages using respectful language. Source: National Autistic Society.

Community experience·3 min read·Last reviewed 07/06/2026·Autism Lifeline Editorial (source: National Autistic Society)

Overview

This original Guide to Autism brief summarizes the main practical value of National Autistic Society's resource, "Autism and Communication." It is not a copy of the source article. It is a new, plain-language article designed to help the Guide to Autism team decide how this topic could become useful site content.

Article brief

Communication support should start from the assumption that behavior and communication are deeply connected. Some autistic people use spoken language, some use AAC, some use scripts or echolalia, some communicate mainly through gestures or behavior, and many use a blend. The right question is not 'How do we make this person communicate normally?' but 'How do we make communication easier, more reliable, and more respectful?' A Guide to Autism article based on this source should explain the topic in practical terms: what communication differences can look like, how stress and sensory overload affect communication, and how supports like visual choices, AAC, wait time, modeling, and functional communication can reduce frustration. It should also explain that AAC does not prevent speech; communication access is the priority. Useful downloads could include communication preference profiles, choice-board templates, a first/then board, a frustration-to-communication worksheet, and questions to ask a speech-language pathologist.

How this becomes site content

Useful for communication pages using respectful language.

Action takeaways

 Create a plain-language page for Families, autistic people, educators.  Label the evidence lens clearly: Autistic-friendly guidance.  Connect this topic to action tools, downloads, and professional questions.  Avoid cure-based, fear-based, or shame-based wording.  Include autistic perspectives when the topic affects identity, dignity, or lived experience.

Citation

Primary source: National Autistic Society, "Autism and Communication." URL: https://www.autism.org.uk/advice-and-guidance/topics/communication

Educational summary written for Autism Lifeline. Verify clinical claims against the primary source before public use.

Sources & further reading

  • National Autistic Society — https://www.autism.org.uk/advice-and-guidance/topics/communication

Educational content only. For individualized assessment or treatment, please consult a qualified professional.