Grim wrote:
I work in a residential care home, 3 of are residents are autistic. Two of them can say only a limited number of single words such as cheese, morph, computer, bath etc. The third cannot speak in words at all but makes a varity of screams in different pitches. He is the only one who is classified as non-verbal.
You know thats weird, because in the childrens specialized hospital I'm always at, the two who say single words like cheese, and bath would be considered nonverbal. I dont hear any nonverbal children say though morph or computer those are def hard ones for them. I even asked psychologists, psychairitrists, therapists, developmental pediatricians, what makes a child nonverbal and it is when when the child can not engage in back and forth conversation, and can not form complete sentences, or when their is no verbal speech at all. One of the other little boys who was 11, amputee, severely autistic labelled nonverbal speaks minor one words, but mainly spoke peoples name and etc.
So I don't know, but even during the autism carnival every april i help run, the autistic children that come, the ones who even the parents say are nonverbal will speak in some sentences. This one little boy who is 8, nonverbal classified by every doctor including the autism specialist, spoke in some sentences like "dog needs fast walk" and say other sentences like those, but can not engage in any conversations at all, which is why he was classified "nonverbal". So I don't know exactly, but by me, at the hospital I work at, and the events I help run, and the one time I did actually participate in an autismspeaks walk, all of those were considered nonverbal. So maybe its different by you, I don't know.
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Being Normal Is Vastly Overrated
