Jensen wrote:
"My" psychologist told me, that the distinction: language delays vs none has been watered out now,
so, as a kid, despite normal language dvelopment and even a quite advanced one, I could easily have got that IA label today, because of other signs, that were present.
There is just ASD at different levels, classifying Aspergers as Level 1.
To be honest, I think some doctors ignored language delay anyway when DXing Asperger Syndrome. I know SO many children (my son's peers) who were DXd Aspie although they had significant speech delays. So why not simply ASD rather than AS? Because they were "so smart!"
It seems (just my experience, and my circle is a small sample) that some assessors leaned more toward "AS is the smart ASD" than "AS is the non-language delay (among other factors, obviously) ASD". That always sort of bugged me. It made for almost a "class system" among ASD, or at least that's how I saw it. Especially given all the for all we know erroneous "Einstein and Newton were Aspies!" cheering. First of all, it gave the false illusion that Aspies are all geniuses. Second of all, if Einstein was on the spectrum and if we are to believe the reports given by family members, he DID have a speech delay, and a fairly significant one. IIRC, he is reported not to have spoken meaningfully until the age of 2 years, 9 months. Isn't that language delay? But he was SOOOOOOO SMART which meant he HAD to be an Aspie, he COULN'T be just ASD, that's the not-smart autism.
On more than one occasion I asked a parent how his/her child could be an Aspie considering the child had an obvious, DXd speech delay (we were in SDC/parent participation until my middle son was four and then again for my youngest son). The fury that followed that I could possibly lump their child in with the "not-smart" autistic children was not to be believed. I quickly learned just not to ask.
Arghhhhhhhhhhh, why did I even think of this much less answer the thread, this always gets me riled up. Calming down now and apologies to all.