You’ve been told a hundred ways to 'say it right'... 'Say person with autism.' 'Actually, identity-first is more respectful.' 'Don’t say special needs—that’s outdated.' 'That’s not affirming language.' If you’ve ever felt like you're walking on eggshells with language, you’re not alone.

Why Most Language in Special Ed Fails Before It Starts

Most of us are using language we inherited—not chose.

No one teaches you how to talk about neurodivergence.
Not clearly. Not respectfully. Not in real life.

So we pick up what’s modeled:

  • 📄 Old reports
  • 🗘️ District templates
  • 🏫 Systems built decades ago

And those systems taught us to say things like:

  • ❌ “Noncompliant”
  • ❌ “Low functioning”
  • ❌ “Not appropriate for this setting”
Sticky note that reads 'Words Matter'
Instead of this… Try this…
“He’s nonverbal.” “He’s nonspeaking and communicates using gestures, facial expressions, and AAC.”
“He’s a flight risk.” “He leaves the area when he feels unsafe, overstimulated, or trapped.”
“He’s not cut out for this class.” “He needs the right supports to thrive in this class.”
“Low functioning.” “Thrives with consistent visual supports and flexible routines.”
“Noncompliant.” “Communicates distress or confusion in the only way they know how right now.”
You don’t need a degree in linguistics to get this right.
All you need is a handbook that shows you how to shift one sentence at a time—and gives your whole team the confidence to do the same.
Interior preview of the Neurodiversity Affirming Handbook

Used by more than 12,000 educators.

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Rated 5 Stars by Educators, Therapists & Parents

This Handbook Is Changing Classrooms (and Families)

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04/09/2024

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Deidre Reed: Absolutely brilliant. I needed this book 52 years ago. Life could have been so much better.

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Change the conversation. Change the outcome.

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Questions? We're here to help: krystie@adapted4specialed.com 714.598.9550