Three little words: behavior is communication.  This poignant reader question,  from my Positive Parenting Solutions guest blog appearance, gets to the heart of what happens when a child with autism cannot communicate his needs.

Q: I teach children who have autism, so I often wish I could get inside their heads to know what’s motivating them. Each is so individual in their likes and dislikes. The aggression towards staff and students of one boy I taught was so hard to manage, I feel like I failed him, his family and his classmates by not being able to establish a safe place for him to learn. What do you think he would have told me if he could have?

A: All humans—all creatures—need a functional means of communication. In our culture, we’ve designated speech as the gold standard of interpersonal communication. Parents of nonverbal or minimally verbal children are often consumed with the urgency of teaching their child to talk. This emphasis on “using our words” is so prevalent that when children with under-developed language skills reach out to us nonverbally, we may miss their attempts to connect. Nearly all children with autism need some form of adaptive communication. When we fail to give a child a functional, meaningful means of communication, his needs and wants go unmet and he finds a way to communicate by whatever means he can. This is what your student was telling everyone around him, loud and clear—that he was not able to express his needs and wants in the manner expected by the adults around him and had not been taught an alternate form of functional communication. He was forced to resort to the only other means he had—his behavior.

Our insistence that our children “use their words” should be only the starting point for our recognizing their efforts to communicate, because words are only a small part of all comprises interpersonal communication. We communicate through the nuance of language (sarcasm, innuendo), through the inflection, pitch and speed of our speech. We communicate through body language, facial expressions, emotional responses, postures and gestures. We communicate through proxemics, allowing some people to come near to us while keeping our distance from others, engaging in or avoiding physical contact and/or eye contact.

Most typically-developing children communicate easily using eye contact, body posture, pointing, but most kids with autism have difficulty indicating interest. They often lack the social thinking skills to know what to reference. Their motor systems can’t plan, coordinate and execute in a way that produces a spontaneous gaze or gesture. We must look farther than the child’s movements or words to be able to hear his needs, thoughts, feelings and longing to communicate.

All behavior is communication, and all behavior has a source. As adults, we often fail to seek out that root cause, perhaps assuming that the child could change this behavior if he wanted to, perhaps trying to squash the behavior without identifying the underlying reason for it. Quelling troubling behavior begins with understanding that the child is giving us information about sensory, language, social and emotional factors in his environment that are affecting his ability to cope. He is telling you that his so-called negative behavior is preventable, but only if you are willing to root out and address the cause. And we must acknowledge that our own behavior is information we impart to the child about his environment. We can’t question what his behavior is telling us without also questioning what our behavior is telling him.

Our job to break down this complex landscape of interaction into parts manageable enough to give the child with autism a meaningful and functional communication system, in whatever form it may take. When I speak at conferences, I put my audience through an exercise simulating what it might be like to lose their functional means of communication. We envision beginning our day by having our mouths taped shut and our fingers taped together. No phone, no email, no texting, no Facebook or Twitter. No functional communication as they know it. Then I ask them to imagine going about their day, their jobs, their responsibilities, confronting the expectations of those around them. They must ask themselves:

How effective would I be?

How successful would I be?
How would my co-workers or family members react?
How much could I contribute?

How long before my frustration, anxiety, anger, fear forced me to exhibit some “behavior?”
And what if it didn’t end at the end of the day?  What if this was my life?

The room always gets very quiet at that point.

Spend some time today thinking about an undesirable behavior of your own, past or present. What need did or does it fill? Have you tried to extinguish the behavior? What did you try? How well did it work? Relate this to your efforts to change an undesirable behavior in your child or student, and you’ll have the beginnings of a new and meaningful understanding of him.

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© 2013 Ellen Notbohm www.ellennotbohm.com

Earlier posts in this series:

Autism parenting: Taming those public meltdowns. Yes, you can.

Blue-plate special for autism “picky” eaters: Respect with a side of patience, sensory exploration

“Interested in Interesting:” Helping your pre-teen with autism find friendships

Autism parenting: Quieting Your Little Screamer. Yes, you can.