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Neurodiversity

What “neuro-affirming” speech therapy really means

Aaisha Deo · Lead Speech Pathologist 28 Apr 2026 6 min read

“Neuro-affirming” is a phrase you'll see more and more. It's not a buzzword for us — it shapes every session. Here's what it actually means.

For a long time, a lot of therapy quietly carried one goal: help the child look and sound more “normal”. Quiet hands. Forced eye contact. Stopping stimming. Speaking instead of signing. Neuro-affirming practice turns that on its head.

Start with neurodiversity

Neurodiversity is the simple idea that brains naturally vary — and that differences like autism, ADHD and language differences are part of human diversity, not things to be erased. A neuro-affirming speech pathologist works with a child's neurology, not against it.

What we move away from

  • Making eye contact a goal for its own sake
  • Discouraging stimming (it often helps a child regulate and focus)
  • Treating spoken words as “better” than AAC, sign or gesture
  • Compliance-based drills that prioritise looking typical over feeling okay
  • Teaching children to mask who they are

What we do instead

  • Follow the child's lead and build on their genuine interests and strengths.
  • Honour all communication — words, signs, devices, gestures and behaviour all count.
  • Focus on connection and being understood, not on appearing “normal”.
  • Presume competence — we assume there's always more going on inside than we can see.
  • Involve the child in their own goals wherever possible.
Why it matters. Research and the lived experience of autistic adults both point the same way: pressure to mask is linked to poorer wellbeing. Therapy that respects a child's identity protects their confidence and mental health — while still building real communication skills.

But will my child still make progress?

Absolutely. Neuro-affirming isn't “hands-off” — it's skilled, evidence-based therapy with a different compass. We still build vocabulary, clearer speech, sentences and literacy. We simply do it in a way that says: you are not a problem to be fixed; you are a person to be understood.

If that's the kind of support you want for your child, that's exactly how we work.

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