212. Stop Waiting for Joint Attention. You’re Delaying Language.
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概要
If you work with children who have autism, minimal joint attention, and limited expressive language, this episode challenges what you’ve been taught and replaces it with something far more useful.
This is not a “wait and see” conversation. This is a rethink-everything conversation.
Drawing from a powerful systematic review and the lens of dynamic systems theory, this episode breaks down why language development in autism does not follow a predictable path and why that actually changes how we should intervene starting today.
You will walk away with a clearer understanding of how language can emerge in unexpected ways, why inconsistency is often a sign of growth, and how to respond in the moment so you do not accidentally shut down emerging communication.
This is about seeing the child differently and adjusting your intervention accordingly.
What You’ll Learn...
Why joint attention is not a prerequisite for language
The reality that some children develop language without following typical developmental sequences?
How children may learn language visually, through patterns, reading, or AAC rather than through listening?
Why “inconsistency” in communication is often a sign that a new skill is emerging
How dynamic systems theory explains variability in language development?
Because the child in front of you is not broken. They are showing you their pathway. You just have to be willing to take it?
3 Clinical Takeaways You Can Use Immediately
- There is no single pathway to language
Children may not follow a linear progression from babbling to words to sentences. Some may start with scripts, reading, or full phrases. Your job is to identify the pathway and build from it. - Variability is not a problem
When a child says a word once and then “loses it,” that is not regression. That is emergence. Do not punish inconsistency. Support it. - Be dynamic in your response
You cannot use a fixed script with a variable system. Adjust moment by moment. Increase support, then fade it. Follow attention, motivation, and engagement in real time.
Referenced in This Episode
Kissine, M., Saint-Denis, A., & Mottron, L. (2023).
Language acquisition can be truly atypical in autism: Beyond joint attention. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 153, 105384.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2023.105384
Spencer, J. P., Perone, S., & Buss, A. T. (2011).
Twenty years and going strong: A dynamic systems revolution in motor and cognitive development. Child Development Perspectives, 5(4), 260–266.
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1750-8606.2011.00194.x
Your Next Step
If this episode is hitting something for you, if you’re realizing that your therapy needs to shift from linear to dynamic, then you need tools that actually match that approach.
Because insight without application does not change outcomes.
Inside the SIS Membership, you get weekly, ready-to-use, literacy-based movement activities that are built for exactly this kind of work.
You are not guessing what to do next
You are not piecing together random strategies
You are walking into your sessions with a clear, research-informed plan that supports real language growth
This is where theory meets practice in a way that actually works.
👉 Join today: https://www.kellyvess.com/sis
Roll up your sleeves and meet me at the intervention drawing board.