Episode Description
What if AAC feels heavy in your classroom, not because you're doing it wrong — but because you've been carrying pressure that was never meant to be there?
In this episode, we reflect on what unfolded during AAC Bootcamp and explore the invisible weight educators, SLPs, and caregivers often carry when supporting AAC users. From second-guessing modeling to worrying about prompt dependency, progress monitoring, and team hesitation, this conversation gently reframes what AAC is actually meant to be.
AAC is not about performance. It is about exposure.
You'll hear real classroom examples of what modeling without expectation looked like in action, what shifted when adults removed pressure, and how teams began moving from urgency to presence.
This episode centers regulation, access, and sustainability — because support works best when it fits daily life.
In This Episode, You'll Learn
- • Why AAC often feels fragile or intimidating in school settings
- • The hidden performance pressure educators carry around communication
- • The difference between modeling for exposure and modeling for output
- • What modeling without expectation actually looks like in real routines
- • Why slow AAC growth is expected — and meaningful
- • How core boards increase language visibility across the classroom
- • What changes when devices become part of classroom culture
- • How to support paraprofessionals and team members in feeling confident with AAC
- • Why advocacy increases when educators feel clear and grounded
- • How shifting from outcomes to opportunities changes everything
Key Takeaways
- • AAC is not about performance — it is about exposure
- • Modeling without expectation reduces pressure and builds trust
- • Communication grows through consistent, low-pressure modeling
- • Slow progress does not mean ineffective support
- • When nervous systems are supported, learning becomes possible
- • Language should be visible and available across routines
- • Confidence across teams increases access for students
- • Culture shifts happen when adults align around shared understanding
- • Access reduces pressure
Try This
- • Choose one daily routine — snack, art, sensory bins, or transitions — and model one or two core words naturally without pausing for imitation
- • Place one core board in a high-use area to increase visual exposure
- • Share this phrase with your team: "We're modeling for exposure, not performance."
- • Focus on consistency over intensity
Related Resources & Links
Autism Little Learners Membership (includes full AAC Bootcamp replay): www.autismlittlelearners.com/pod
AAC Strategies: Building Buy-In to Help Teams Embrace AAC as a Child's Voice
Gestalt Language Processing & Music
Communication, Autism & AAC: Why AAC Is Not a Reward
AAC and Dysregulation: Why Kids Can't Use AAC When They're Dysregulated
When adults move from pressure to presence, classrooms feel safer. When we trust exposure, language grows. Connection is the foundation.