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Communicative Competence for Individuals who require Augmentative and Alternative Communication: A New Definition for a New Era of Communication?

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In 1989, Light defined communicative competence for individuals with complex communication needs who require augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) as a dynamic, interpersonal construct based on functionality of communication, adequacy of communication, and sufficiency of knowledge, judgment, and skills. Specifically, Light argued that in order to demonstrate communicative competence, individuals who required AAC had to develop and integrate knowledge, judgment, and skills in four interrelated domains: linguistic, operational, social, and strategic. In 2003, Light expanded this definition and argued that the attainment of communicative competence is influenced not just by linguistic, operational, social, and strategic competencies, but also by a variety of psychosocial factors (e.g., motivation, attitude, confidence, resilience) as well as by barriers and supports in the environment. In the 25 years since this definition of communicative competence for individuals who use AAC was originally proposed, there have been significant changes in the AAC field. In this paper, we review the preliminary definition of communicative competence proposed 25 years ago, consider the changes in the field, and then revisit the proposed definition to determine if it is still relevant and valid for this new era of communication.
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EDITORIAL
Communicative Competence for Individuals who require Augmentative
and Alternative Communication: A New De nition for a New Era
of Communication?
JANICE LIGHT & DAVID MCNAUGHTON
The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA, USA
Abstract
In 1989, Light de ned communicative competence for individuals with complex communication needs who require augmentative
and alternative communication (AAC) as a dynamic interpersonal construct based on functionality of communication; adequacy
of communication; and suf ciency of knowledge, judgment, and skills. Speci cally, Light argued that, in order to demonstrate
communicative competence, individuals who required AAC had to develop and integrate knowledge, judgment, and skills in
four interrelated domains: linguistic, operational, social, and strategic. In 2003, Light expanded this de nition and argued that
the attainment of communicative competence is in uenced by not just linguistic, operational, social, and strategic competencies
but also a variety of psychosocial factors (e.g., motivation, attitude, con dence, resilience) as well as barriers and supports in
the environment. In the 25 years since this de nition of communicative competence for individuals who use AAC was originally
proposed, there have been signi cant changes in the AAC eld. In this paper, we review the preliminary de nition of communica-
tive competence, consider the changes in the eld, and then revisit the proposed de nition to determine if it is still relevant and
valid for this new era of communication.
Keywords: Communication ; Assistive technology ; Competency
Introduction
The silence of speechlessness is never golden. We all need
to communicate and connect with each other not just
in one way, but in as many ways as possible. It is a basic
human need, a basic human right. And more than this, it is
a basic human power (B. Williams, 2000, p. 248)
In this quote, Bob Williams, an expert communicator via
augmentative and alternative communication (AAC),
clearly articulates the singular importance of commu-
nication. Without access to effective communication,
individuals with complex communication needs are
consigned to live their lives with minimal means to
express needs and wants, develop social relationships,
and exchange information with others (Blackstone,
Williams, & Wilkins, 2007). The ultimate goal of inter-
vention for individuals with complex communication
needs is to support the development of communicative
competence so that these individuals have access to
the power of communication to interact with others,
to have an in uence on their environment, and to
participate fully in society (Beukelman & Mirenda,
2013). Communicative competence is essential to the
quality of life of individuals with complex communica-
tion needs, for it provides the means to attain personal,
educational, vocational, and social goals (Calculator,
2009; Lund & Light, 2007).
In 1989, Light proposed an initial de nition of com-
municative competence as a relative and dynamic,
interpersonal construct based on functionality of
communication, adequacy of communication, and
suf ciency of knowledge, judgment and skill in four
interrelated domains: linguistic competence, opera-
tional competence, social competence, and strategic
competence (p. 137). In this paper, we consider this
de nition of communicative competence proposed
25 years ago, highlight the key changes in the AAC eld
over the past 25 years, and then revisit this de nition
of communicative competence to determine if it is still
relevant and valid in today s fast-changing and dynamic
era of communication.
Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 2014; 30(1): 1–18
© 2014 International Society for Augmentative and Alternative Communication
ISSN 0743-4618 print/ISSN 1477-3848 online
DOI: 10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
Correspondence: The Pennsylvania State University, Communication Sciences and Disorders, 308G Ford Building, University Park, PA 16802, USA.
Email: jcl4@psu.edu
(Received 11 January 2014 ; accepted 15 January 2014 )
Augment Altern Commun Downloaded from informahealthcare.com by Penn State Berks Campus on 04/11/14
For personal use only.
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
1
Communicative Competence for Individuals
who require Augmentative and Alternative Communication:
A New Definition for a New Era of Communication?
Janice Light & David McNaughton
The Pennsylvania State University
Abstract
In 1989, Light defined communicative competence for individuals with complex communication needs
who require augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) as a dynamic, interpersonal construct based on
functionality of communication, adequacy of communication, and sufficiency of knowledge, judgment, and
skills. Specifically, Light argued that in order to demonstrate communicative competence, individuals who
required AAC had to develop and integrate knowledge, judgment, and skills in four interrelated domains:
linguistic, operational, social, and strategic. In 2003, Light expanded this definition and argued that the
attainment of communicative competence is influenced not just by linguistic, operational, social, and strategic
competencies, but also by a variety of psychosocial factors (e.g., motivation, attitude, confidence, resilience) as
well as by barriers and supports in the environment. In the 25 years since this definition of communicative
competence for individuals who use AAC was originally proposed, there have been significant changes in the
AAC field. In this paper, we review the preliminary definition of communicative competence proposed 25 years
ago, consider the changes in the field, and then revisit the proposed definition to determine if it is still relevant
and valid for this new era of communication.
The silence of speechlessness is never
golden. We all need to communicate and
connect with each other – not just in one
way, but in as many ways as possible. It is a
basic human need, a basic human right. And
more than this, it is a basic human power…
(B. Williams, 2000; p. 248).
In this quote, Bob Williams, an expert
communicator via augmentative and alternative
communication (AAC), clearly articulates the
singular importance of communication. Without
access to effective communication, individuals with
complex communication needs are consigned to live
their lives with minimal means to express needs and
wants, develop social relationships, and exchange
information with others (Blackstone, Williams, &
Wilkins, 2007). The ultimate goal of intervention
for individuals with complex communication needs
is to support the development of communicative
competence so that these individuals have access to
the power of communication – to interact with
others, to have an influence on their environment,
and to participate fully in society (Beukelman &
Mirenda, 2013). Communicative competence is
Communicative Competence
2
essential to the quality of life of individuals with
complex communication needs for it provides the
means to attain personal, educational, vocational,
and social goals (Calculator, 2009; Lund & Light,
2007).
In 1989, Light proposed an initial definition
of communicative competence as “…a relative and
dynamic, interpersonal construct based on
functionality of communication, adequacy of
communication, and sufficiency of knowledge,
judgment and skill in four interrelated domains:
linguistic competence, operational competence,
social competence, and strategic competence” (p.
137). In this paper, we consider this definition of
communicative competence proposed 25 years ago,
highlight the key changes in the AAC field over the
past 25 years, and then revisit this definition of
communicative competence to determine if it is still
relevant and valid in today’s fast-changing and
dynamic era of communication.
Preliminary Definition of Communicative
Competence
The preliminary definition of
communicative competence proposed by Light
(1989) rests on three fundamental constructs: (a)
functionality of communication, (b) adequacy of
communication, and (c) sufficiency of knowledge,
judgment and skill.
Functionality of Communication
Historically, communication interventions
focused on attempting to remediate speech and/or
language impairments in isolation in an effort to
“repair broken parts” (Lyon, 1998; p.204). These
interventions seldom resulted in the attainment of
functional communication skills for those with
complex communication needs (e.g., Estrella, 2000;
Fox & Fried-Oken, 1996). In order to ensure the
attainment of communicative competence, AAC
interventions need to focus not on the
demonstration of isolated skills within labs, clinic
rooms, or therapy sessions, but rather on actual
communication performance within naturally
occurring contexts (Light, 1989; Williams,
Krezman, & McNaughton, 2008). The need for a
focus on functional communication and
participation within society is recognized in the
World Health Organization’s proposed International
Classification of Functioning, Disability, and Health
(Enderby, 2013; Simeonsson, Björck-Åkesson, &
Lollar, 2012). A functional approach emphasizes
functional outcomes in the real world, with
intervention to build skills that have consequences
that are valued by individuals with complex
communication needs and their partners in daily
life, including the ability to express needs and
wants, exchange information, develop social
closeness, and participate as required in social
etiquette routines (Light, 1988).
The functionality of communication skills,
that is, the success of the skills (or the lack thereof),
depends on the communication demands present
within the individual’s environment, be it home,
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
3
school, work, and/or the community. Martin
Pistorius, an adult with a neurodegenerative
condition who relies on AAC, highlighted the
critical importance of functional communication
skills to meet daily communication needs
throughout the day:
We need to look at every aspect of our lives,
from the time we wake up in the morning,
until we get up the following morning. We
need to be able to communicate 24/7 like so-
called “normal” speaking people do.
(Pistorius, 2004; p. 3)
Adequacy of Communication
Hand in hand with the focus on the
functionality of communication, consideration of
communicative competence also requires a focus on
the attainment of an adequate level of
communication skills to meet environmental
demands and reach communication goals (Light,
1989). The attainment of communicative
competence does not require mastery of the art of
communication; rather communicative competence
is a threshold concept with a focus on the
attainment of sufficient knowledge, judgment, and
skills to meet communication goals and participate
within key environments. An individual’s
communicative competence may vary across
contexts depending on the partners, environments,
and communication goals. For example, some
individuals with complex communication needs
may have developed adequate skills to meet the
demands of interactions with familiar partners in
routine contexts, but may struggle to communicate
effectively with less familiar partners in more novel
contexts where the demands are greater.
What defines adequacy of communication
will vary depending on the goals of the individual
who uses AAC and the communication
requirements to meet those goals. Individuals who
require AAC may define the success of intervention
differently than professionals do, depending on their
personal goals; these views must be respected.
Wertz (1998) provided this account of the
intervention that he planned for Doug who had
aphasia following a stroke:
Treatment ended before I thought it would.
The progress Doug made in our two months
together prompted me to urge continued
treatment. I was more excited about Doug’s
progress than he was, and he was more
satisfied with his progress than I was. About
halfway through our second month, Doug
indicated he was ready to go home. He had
passed a driving test, qualified for disability
income, and achieved sufficient
communicative ability for his purposes. His
plan was to become a person rather than a
Communicative Competence
4
patient. That was his right, and he exercised
it (p.31).
As described in this account, Doug determined that
he had attained an adequate level of communication
to meet his goals in his daily life; from his
perspective, he had attained sufficient
communicative competence for the situations that
mattered most to him, and his priority was to return
to living his life, rather than participating in further
intervention.
Sufficient Knowledge, Judgment, and Skills
According to Light (1989), the adequacy of
functioning required to attain communicative
competence is predicated upon sufficient
knowledge, judgment, and skills in four interrelated
domains: linguistic, operational, social, and
strategic. Linguistic and operational competencies
reflect knowledge, judgment, and skills in the tools
of communication whereas social and strategic
competencies reflect knowledge, judgment, and
skills in the use of these tools in daily interactions.
Linguistic competence. If individuals with
complex communication needs are to develop
communicative competence, they must develop
sufficient knowledge, judgment, and skills in the
linguistic code of the language(s) spoken and
written in the individual’s family and broader social
community, including receptive skills and as many
expressive skills in these languages as possible. In
addition, they must also learn the language code of
the AAC systems that they utilize, including the
representational aspects of AAC symbols (Mineo
Mollica, 2003) as well as the semantic and
syntactic aspects required to express meaning
(Blockberger & Sutton, 2003). Doing so is
complicated by the fact that many AAC systems are
not actually true language systems (Light, 1997).
They are essentially semantic systems that include
sets of symbols to convey concepts, but have no
inherent syntax or morphology. Developing
competence with the language code of the AAC
systems is further complicated for there is an
asymmetry (Smith & Grove, 2003) between the
language code through which individuals who
require AAC receive their input (i.e., the spoken
language of their families and broader social
community) and the language code through which
they must express themselves (i.e., the form and
content of multimodal expression that may include
use of some speech or speech approximations, use
of gestures or signs, and use of aided AAC
symbols). Furthermore, individuals with complex
communication needs typically have limited access
to models of effective communication via AAC
(Ballin, Balandin, Stancliffe, & Togher, 2011). Gus
Estrella, an experienced and sophisticated
communicator via AAC, emphasized the
importance of concerted intervention to build the
linguistic skills that underpin communicative
competence:
Dig in, get the support of both the school
and the social service agencies, get the
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
5
devices funded, and make us work our little
tails off until we master enough language to
become competent communicators.
(Estrella, 2000; p. 45).
Operational competence. Operational skills
involve skills in the technical operation of AAC
strategies and techniques, including: (a) skills to
produce the hand or body positions, shapes,
orientations, and movements for gestures, signs, or
other forms of unaided communication (e.g., eye
blink codes, head nod / shake); (b) skills to utilize
selection technique(s) for aided AAC systems (e.g.,
direct selection with a finger or fist, eye gaze,
scanning with a single switch); and, (c) skills to
navigate and operate aided AAC systems accurately
and efficiently (e.g., navigate between pages, enter
codes to retrieve pre-stored vocabulary items).
These operational skills must extend across the full
range of modes used by the individual with complex
communication needs, including both unaided and
aided means of communication, both low tech and
high tech (Beukelman, Fager, Ball, & Dietz, 2007;
Hodge, 2007). Randy Horton described the
significant demands of learning the operational
skills for a single AAC system (approximately 96
hours in Randy’s case) and the lack of instruction
typically provided to support the development of
these skills:
People without disabilities receive 12 years
of writing and language teaching during
school. I had next to none. …Usually the
consumer is given 2 to 6 hours of teaching
how to use the device. Extensive, intensive
teaching during implementation is the key to
success (Horton, Horton, & Meyers, 2001,
p. 49)
Social competence. Individuals who require
AAC must develop social competence to ensure
appropriate functional use of AAC tools to meet
their communication goals; they must learn when to
communicate and when not, about what to
communicate, with whom, when, where, and in
what manner (Hymes, 1972). Social competence
requires both sociolinguistic and sociorelational
skills. Sociolinguistic skills refer to the pragmatic
aspects of communication, in other words, discourse
skills (e.g., taking turns, initiating and terminating
interactions, maintaining and developing topics) and
skills to express a wide range of communicative
functions (e.g., requesting attention, requesting
information, providing information, confirming).
Sociorelational skills refer to the interpersonal
aspects of communication that form the foundation
for developing effective relationships. Light,
Arnold, and Birmingham (2003) identified a range
of sociorelational skills that may further the
communicative competence of individuals who use
Communicative Competence
6
AAC (e.g., participating actively in interactions,
demonstrating interest in partners, projecting a
positive self image). Sociorelational skills bear
special importance for individuals with complex
communication needs who may face significant
barriers to interpersonal relationships (Anderson,
Balandin, & Clendon, 2011; Light et al., 2003). Jim
Prentice, an expert communicator via AAC who
worked as a statistical record keeper at a large
company, poignantly illustrated the importance of
developing social competence:
When I started to work, I’m sure that all the
employees surrounding my workstation
probably thought that I was someone from
Mars. I rode in on my motorized wheelchair
and has some sort of device attached to my
chair. I rode past them and they really didn’t
know whether I was able to talk. If they did
talk to me, they weren’t sure I was able to
answer them. …I stopped them in their
tracks, before they were frozen on the spot,
and said, “Good morning, my name is Jim.
How are all of you doing today?” Big smiles
came on their faces, and they seemed to
answer in unison, “We are fine, and it’s nice
to have you working with us.” That sure
broke the ice. I felt like one of the team then.
I made sure I programmed a few jokes into
my communicator so that it would make my
conversations more friendly and comfortable
for them. It worked! (Prentice, 2000; p.
209).
Strategic competence. Because of their
significant disabilities, the substantial
environmental barriers confronted in society, and
the inherent restrictions of AAC systems,
individuals with complex communication needs
invariably confront limitations in their linguistic,
operational, and/or social competence. In these
cases, they must develop coping strategies to bypass
these limitations and allow them to make the best of
what they do know and can do (McNaughton et al.,
2008; Todman, Alm, Higginbotham, & File, 2008;
Williams, 2004). These compensatory strategies
may be temporary, used for a time while the
individual recovers or learns new linguistic,
operational, and/or social skills; or the
compensatory strategies may be required long term
in situations where limitations in the linguistic,
operational, and/or social domain cannot be
remediated (Light, 1989). In order to obtain
communicative competence, individuals with
complex communication needs may rely on a range
of strategies to overcome linguistic constraints (e.g.,
asking the communication partner to write or type
as they speak to support comprehension difficulties;
directing the partner to provide choices when faced
with vocabulary limitations); operational constraints
(e.g., using telegraphic messages to enhance the rate
of communication; asking partners to guess as
messages are spelled to reduce fatigue); and social
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
7
constraints (e.g., using an introduction strategy to
explain the AAC system and how to use it; using
humor to put unfamiliar partners at ease) (Mirenda
& Bopp, 2003). Randy Kitch, an expert
communicator who uses his foot to access AAC,
illustrated the importance of strategic competence to
overcome the difficulties that he encountered when
a store clerk ignored his communicative attempts:
I decided to type him a note explaining how
I communicated with my letter board and
went back to the store the next day to give it
to him. I went up to him, sat on the floor and
footed him the note. It said, “I communicate
by spelling words on a letter board with my
big toe and I would appreciate it if you
would communicate with me.” It also said,
“I would like to purchase some head cleaner
for my cassette player.” He got the cleaner. I
gave him the money, and after he handed me
the cleaner, I spelled out “THANK YOU”
on the letter board and he said, “You’re
welcome.” (Kitch, 2005; p.49).
Psychosocial Factors that Influence
Communicative Competence
In 2003, Light expanded the preliminary
model of communicative competence and argued
that the attainment of communicative competence
by individuals with complex communication needs
is impacted not just by their linguistic, operational,
social, and strategic competence, but also by a range
of psychosocial factors including motivation,
attitude, confidence, and resilience.
Motivation. Motivation to communicate
impacts the individual’s desire or drive to
communicate with others in daily situations (Light,
2003). Communication via AAC is a complex
process that imposes significant motor, cognitive,
sensory perceptual, and linguistic demands (e.g.,
Thistle & Wilkinson, 2013). When motivation to
communicate is high, individuals with complex
communication needs are more likely to tackle the
demands of communication via AAC; when
motivation is low, they may be overwhelmed by
these demands and may elect to forego many
communication opportunities (Clarke, McConachie,
Price, & Wood, 2001; Fox & Sohlberg, 2000). Jan
Staehely (2000), who utilizes AAC to support her
communication, described the challenge of
maintaining motivation when she did not have
effective means to communicate:
I had become so used to not being able to
say something in depth to a person that I
started to believe that I was a person who
didn’t have much to tell people. I fooled
myself into thinking that I didn’t have
anything to say. (p. 9).
Individuals with complex communication needs
require numerous positive and successful
Communicative Competence
8
communication experiences to build their
motivation to attain communicative competence.
Attitude. The attitudes of individuals with
complex communication needs and their families,
especially as they relate to AAC also impacts the
attainment of communicative competence. Attitudes
towards AAC may predispose the use (or lack of
use) of AAC as required within social situations.
Lasker and Bedrosian (2000) proposed a model of
AAC acceptance that considered the impact of three
sets of factors: (a) milieu factors (e.g., partners,
setting, time of day); (b) person factors (e.g.,
disability, personality, age, skills, needs, history,
expectations); and (c) AAC-related factors (e.g.,
ease of learning, appearance, functionality).
Attitudes may change with changes to person,
milieu, and /or system factors. Rob Rummel-
Hudson the father of a daughter, Schuyler, who
requires AAC, described the effect of different
AAC systems on his daughter’s attitude toward
AAC and, as a result, her willingness or
unwillingness to utilize AAC to support her
communication:
Her enthusiasm [with her new SGD] was
perhaps the most significant development,
perhaps more important than whether or not
she intuitively “got it.” She did, but even
better, she was fascinated by the device. She
used it for everything. …We knew that if a
speech prosthesis was going to work for her,
it was going to be because she took the
initiative to make it happen, the same way
she came to embrace sign language and,
conversely, the way she completely rejected
the picture identification system that every
one of her schools had tried to get her to
use… My pity went out to the person who
tried to make Schuyler do something she
didn’t want to do, or who tried to keep her
from doing something she liked. (Rummel-
Hudson, 2008; p. 223).
Confidence. Motivation impacts the
individual’s drive to communicate and attitude
toward AAC impacts the individual’s willingness to
use AAC to communicate, but it is confidence that
actually determines the individual’s propensity to
act in other words, to attempt to communicate in
any given situation. Confidence has to do with the
individual’s self-assurance, in this case, specifically
self-assurance that he or she can communicate
successfully in the given situation(s). Using AAC to
meet communication needs requires individuals
with complex communication needs to try
techniques that may initially be new and unfamiliar,
to both them and their communication partners,
typically with few models of others who
successfully communicate using AAC (Ballin et
al., 2011; Light et al., 2007). Seeing or interacting
with others who use AAC who have attained
communicative competence may serve as a critical
support in building communicative confidence.
Rick Creech (1995), who was a pioneer in his use of
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
9
AAC in both post-secondary settings and the
workplace, explained,
Until we have seen a fluent interactive,
augmented speaker who shares our physical
circumstances, there may have been little in
our personal experience to indicate that we,
ourselves, would someday actually ‘talk’. (p.
12).
Resilience. Although confidence may
determine the individual’s propensity to attempt to
communicate, it is resilience that influences
whether or not the individual perseveres with
communication despite the many challenges and
potential failures encountered. Resilience refers to
the “…capacity which allows a person to
prevent, minimize, or overcome the damaging
effects of adversity” (Grotberg, 1995, p. 7). It is
inevitable that individuals with complex
communication needs will confront failure at times
in their attempts to communicate successfully.
These failures may result from limitations in their
linguistic, operational, social, and strategic skills
and/or from barriers within the environment
(Balandin, Hemsley, Sigafoos, & Green, 2007;
Snell, Chen, Allaire, & Park, 2008).
Communication failures provide important
opportunities for learning and may ultimately fuel
subsequent success, but only if the individual is
resilient enough to move on and try again.
Resilience is a dynamic factor that is affected by the
adversity encountered (e.g., the nature, severity,
timing of the adversity), as well as protective
factors (both individual resources and
environmental supports) that may support recovery
from the adversity (Luthar, Cicchetti, & Becker,
2000; Masten, 2001). For example, individual
protective factors that support resilience may
include problem solving skills, self esteem,
optimism, or faith; environmental protective factors
may include encouragement and support from
family, mentors, teachers, employers, or peers.
Individuals with complex communication needs
who have access to clusters of protective factors are
more apt to demonstrate resilience in the face of
communication failures and are therefore more apt
to build, re-build, or sustain communicative
competence in the face of adversity (Dickerson,
Stone, Panchura, & Usiak, 2002; Smith & Murray,
2011). In contrast, those who do not have access to
protective factors will have greater difficulty
rebounding from adversity, learning from these
failures, and ultimately developing communicative
competence. Morrie Schwartz, a man who had ALS,
wrote about the importance of resilience in the face
of the adversity that he faced as his disease
progressed:
I have become more and more dependent as
my disease has progressed. I am being
Communicative Competence
10
wheeled around to get everywhere, I am fed,
bathed, taken to the john. A whole host of
things I did independently and took for
granted as being part of my physical self are
now done for me by other people. Although
I am dependent, I have an independent
mind, mature emotions, and I use my
independence to keep my essential self
going. (Pillar & Schwartz, 1996; p. 73).
Environmental Supports and Barriers
Communicative competence is impacted not
only by factors intrinsic to the individual with
complex communication needs (e.g., linguistic,
operational, social and strategic skills as well as
psychosocial factors such as motivation, attitude,
confidence and resilience), but also by extrinsic
factors, including barriers in the environment that
may impede communicative competence, and
environmental supports that may enhance
communicative competence (Light, 2003).
Ultimately, communication is an interpersonal
process where meaning is created in partnership
(Blackstone et al., 2007; Teachman & Gibson,
2014). As a result, intervention to enhance
communicative competence necessitates not only
intervention with the individual with complex
communication needs, but also intervention with
partners in the environment to reduce barriers and
ensure appropriate supports as required (Ball &
Lasker, 2013; Kent-Walsh & McNaughton, 2005;
Soto, 2012). Jan Staehely, who uses AAC to
communicate, emphasized the interpersonal nature
of communicative competence as follows:
Just as a dance couldn’t possibly be a dance
unless people moved to it, so language
doesn’t become communication until people
grow to understand and express it back. It
has to be a two-way exchange. This is why
communicating is an action word. (Staehely,
2000; p. 3).
All individuals who require AAC are
impacted by environmental factors, but the extent of
the impact will vary across individuals depending
on their intrinsic communication resources: Those
with strong linguistic, operational, social, and
strategic skills and well-developed psychosocial
factors will be less vulnerable to environmental
barriers and constraints than those who are
beginning communicators or those who experience
significant language /cognitive limitations
(McNaughton & Light, 2013; Williams,
Beukelman, & Ullman, 2012) According to
Beukelman and Mirenda (2013), environmental
barriers and supports may cut across a range of
domains including policy, practice, attitude,
knowledge and skill barriers or supports.
Policy and practice barriers and supports.
Individuals with complex communication needs
may encounter policy and practice barriers that are
systemic within society and serve to limit their
communication opportunities and therefore their
development of communicative competence
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
11
(Cooper, Balandin, & Trembath, 2009; Stancliffe et
al., 2010). Policy barriers result from official laws,
standards, or regulations, whereas practice barriers
result from conventional procedures within schools,
work settings, or society that may not be officially
documented but are accepted practice (Beukelman
& Mirenda, 2013). John Draper, a competent
communicator who relies on AAC, discussed some
of the policy / practice barriers he encountered
during his education in an inclusive school
environment:
My success in meeting the rigors of the
school curriculum depended in large part on
the extent to which my educational team
worked collaboratively. It was not
uncommon for more than 30 professionals to
be involved in my life at any one time. It
was a constant struggle to get everyone to
work together effectively and not to become
distracted by their individual mandates,
policies, and turfs. It took time for everyone
to realize that true collaboration could be
achieved only when the team understood
everyone’s individual roles, clarified
expectations in writing, and established
communication guidelines. (Carter &
Draper, 2010; p. 73).
Sometimes practices that appear to be
inconsequential to professionals have substantial
negative effects on the lives of individuals who
require AAC. John Draper described some of the
practices at his high school that created barriers in
his interactions with his peers:
Of utmost importance to me was having a
sense of belonging in my school community.
By virtue of my physical and
communication challenges, I didn’t really fit
into the social circles of high school. This
reality, combined with the lack of
knowledge on the part of many school
personnel on how to promote disability
awareness or foster peer relationships,
resulted in missed opportunities. One
example in high school was how lockers of
students who had a disability were grouped
in a separate location rather than integrated
into the alphabetical order of the rest of the
student population. Another example was
the practice of having students who had a
disability work with paraprofessionals in a
segregated resource room during free
periods rather than allowing us to interact
with our peers in the school library. These
practices limited my chances of connecting
with my peers. (Carter & Draper, 2010; p.
82).
Ultimately, as Carter and Draper (2010)
suggest, the goal is to eliminate policy and practice
Communicative Competence
12
barriers and ensure that there are sufficient supports
for participation and meaningful inclusion of
individuals who require AAC in all aspects of
society. Mirenda (1993) summed up this goal best
when she wrote:
I am talking about community living
situations that help people become members
of, not just residents in, communities. I am
talking about programs in which a lot of
emphasis is placed on helping people get to
know and connect with their neighbors and
their local shopkeepers. …(M)embership is
different than joining or living next door to
or affiliating with - you can do all those
things on your own. But you have not
achieved membership in a group until the
group says you have; it is mutual, it is
consensual. That is what we want
membership in communities. (p. 6)
Attitude barriers and supports. As
Mirenda (1993) suggested, achieving true
membership in communities is not just about policy
and practice supports, it also requires the
elimination of attitude barriers. Attitude barriers
occur when people hold negative feelings that
predispose them to act in ways that limit the
communication opportunities of individuals who
require AAC (Hodge, 2007; McCarthy & Light,
2005). Bob Williams (2000) described the problem
of pervasive attitude barriers for individuals who
require AAC:
Why are so many people consigned to lead
lives of needless dependence and silence?
Not because we lack the funds, nor because
we lack the federal policy mandates needed
to gain access to those funds. Rather, many
people lead lives of silence because many
others still find it difficult to believe that
people with speech disabilities like my own
have anything to say or contributions to
make. (p. 250).
As Williams suggested, too often attitude barriers
result in reduced expectations for individuals with
complex communication needs and limited
opportunities for participation. Concerted advocacy
and intervention is required to address attitude
barriers and ensure that individuals with complex
communication needs who use AAC have
meaningful opportunities to communicate and to
participate at school, at work, in their families, and
in their broader social communities.
Knowledge and skill barriers and
supports. Even when the necessary policy, practice
and attitude supports are in place, it may not be
sufficient to ensure the development of
communicative competence by individuals who
require AAC. Learning to communicate using AAC
is a complex process (Bailey, Parette, Stoner,
Angell, & Carroll, 2006; Rackensperger, Krezman,
McNaughton, Williams, & D’Silva, 2005). Many
individuals who require AAC experience significant
linguistic, operational, and social constraints and
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
13
require support from their partners to ensure
successful communication (Blackstone et al., 2007).
In order to provide appropriate supports, partners
(e.g., family members, educational personnel,
employers, co-workers, friends) require knowledge
of AAC systems and services as well as
competencies in appropriate interaction strategies
(e.g., Kent-Walsh, Binger, & Hasham, 2010; Sorin-
Peters, McGilton, & Rochon, 2010). Jean
Dominique Bauby (1997) emphasized the
importance of the partner’s knowledge and skill in
determining the success (or failure) of his
communication attempts using AAC following a
brainstem stroke:
It is a simple enough (AAC) system. You
read off the alphabet …until, with a blink of
my eye, I stop you at the letter to be noted.
…That, at least, is the theory. In reality, all
does not go well for some visitors. Because
of nervousness, impatience, and obtuseness,
performances vary in the handling of the
code. …Nervous visitors come most quickly
to grief. They reel off the alphabet
tonelessly, at top speed, jotting down letters
almost at random; and then seeing the
meaningless result, exclaim, “I’m an idiot!”.
…Reticent people are much more difficult.
If I ask them, “How are you?” they answer,
“Fine,” immediately putting the ball back in
my court. …Meticulous people never go
wrong: they scrupulously note down each
letter and never seek to unravel the mystery
of a sentence before it is complete. …Such
scrupulousness makes for laborious
progress, but at least you avoid the
misunderstandings in which impulsive
visitors bog down when they neglect to
verify their intuitions. (p. 20-22).
As Bauby (1997) suggested, partners may require
instruction to develop the knowledge and skills
required to interact effectively and support
communicative competence with individuals who
require AAC.
Key Changes in the Field of Augmentative and
Alternative Communication
In the 25 years since Light first proposed
this model of communicative competence, there
have been dramatic changes in the AAC field: (a)
changes in the demographics of the population that
uses AAC; (b) changes in the scope of
communication needs that must be considered; (c)
changes in the AAC systems that are available; and,
(d) changes in expectations for participation by
individuals who use AAC (Light & McNaughton,
2012a). Given these dramatic changes, it seems
appropriate to re-visit the original definition of
communicative competence to assess its current
relevance and validity. Specifically, we consider
Communicative Competence
14
each of the key changes in the field and the
potential implications of these changes for the
proposed model of communicative competence as
well as the implications for interventions to build
communicative competence.
Changes in the Demographics of the Population
that Uses AAC
During the past 25 years, the field of AAC
has witnessed significant increases in the numbers
of people with complex communication who
receive or might benefit from AAC services;
furthermore, the population receiving AAC services
is increasingly diverse in terms of age, disability,
language, culture, and race/ ethnicity (Beukelman,
2012; Light & McNaughton, 2012a; Mueller,
Singer, & Carranza, 2006; Soto & Yu, 2014). In
addition to the increased prevalence of individuals
with complex communication needs, there have also
been significant improvements in preservice and
inservice training in AAC over the past 25 years
(e.g., Costigan & Light, 2010; Ratcliff, Koul, &
Lloyd, 2008), resulting in greater professional
awareness and acceptance of AAC intervention
generally. AAC interventions are no longer viewed
only as a last resort to be implemented with
individuals with no speech or extremely limited
speech, only once traditional speech and language
interventions fail; rather an increasing number of
professionals now understand the potential benefits
of AAC intervention for those who are at risk for
speech and language development (e.g. Romski et
al., 2010), those who rely on speech but require
augmentation to clarify or enhance intelligibility
(e.g., Hanson, Beukelman, & Yorkston, 2013),
those who are recovering following a stroke or
traumatic brain injury (e.g., Petroi, Koul, & Corwin,
2014), those who are experiencing the loss of
speech or language skills due to degenerative
conditions (e.g., Fried-Oken, Beukelman, & Hux,
2012) and those who may have temporary
conditions (e.g., Costello, Patak, & Pritchard,
2010). As a result, AAC interventions are now
implemented with a much larger and more diverse
population, including individuals across the life
span, both younger and older than ever before, and
individuals with a wide array of disabilities who
present with a much more diverse array of needs
and skills than ever before.
Beyond the increased diversity in the age
and disability profiles of individuals who require
AAC, there is also increased diversity in language,
culture, and ethnicity/ race of those who are
receiving AAC services (Soto & Yu, 2014). This
linguistic, cultural, and racial/ ethnic diversity
results from two key developments. First, the global
reach of AAC intervention has been extended
worldwide, especially to developing countries,
through the efforts of families and professionals
(Alant, 2007; Bornman, Bryen, Kershaw, &
Ledwaba, 2011). Evidence of the growing impact of
AAC worldwide is found in the recognition of the
International Society for Augmentative and
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
15
Alternative Communication (ISAAC) as a Non-
Governmental Organization in consultative status
with the United Nations Economic and Social
Council. In addition to this extended global reach of
AAC, Soto and Yu (2014) noted that unprecedented
movement of the population over the past 20-25
years (e.g., from developing countries to developed
ones, from rural to urban areas) has resulted in
substantial increases in the numbers of children and
adults with complex communication needs
receiving AAC services who come from culturally
and linguistically diverse backgrounds.
Implications of the changing
demographics for communicative competence.
What are the implications of these changing
demographics for the definition of communicative
competence and for interventions to enhance
communicative competence? The greater range of
ages and disabilities served has necessitated a
greater range of AAC interventions, including ones:
(a) to build communicative competence for the first
time with those who have developmental disabilities
through instruction in linguistic, operational, social,
and strategic skills (e.g., Snell et al., 2010); (b) to
re-build communicative competence with those who
have acquired disabilities or temporary conditions,
capitalizing on existing linguistic and social
strengths and teaching operational and strategic
skills to bypass limitations in these domains to
maximize communication performance (e.g.,
Costello et al., 2010, Petroi, at al., 2014; Light &
Gulens, 2000; Simmons-Mackie, King &
Beukelman, 2013); and, (c) to sustain
communicative competence for as long as possible
with those who have degenerative neurogenic
disabilities through implementation of AAC
supports (e.g., Fried-Oken et al., 2012).
These interventions must respond not only
to the motor, sensory perceptual, and cognitive
skills of individuals who require AAC, but also to
their cultural and linguistic backgrounds (Binger,
Kent-Walsh, Berens, Del Campo, & Rivera, 2008).
Individuals with complex communication needs
who live in bilingual or multilingual environments
face significantly increased linguistic and
operational demands in the development of
communicative competence, for the different
languages and cultures in which they participate
will no doubt require different modalities of
communication, different vocabularies, different
representations, different layouts, and different
organizations (e.g., Nakamura, Iwabuchi, & Alm,
2006; Soto & Yu, 2014). Individuals who require
AAC who live in bilingual and multilingual
environments must develop competence in: (a) the
spoken and written languages of their family and
broader social communities including
comprehension skills and as many expressive skills
Communicative Competence
16
as possible, including the phonological, semantic,
syntactic, morphological and pragmatic aspects of
these languages, which may differ significantly
depending on the specific languages involved; (b)
the language codes of the different AAC strategies
and techniques that they use to communicate in
these different cultural and linguistic environments;
(c) the operational skills to produce and /or
technically operate these different unaided or aided
AAC systems; and (d) the social skills to know
when and how to code switch between languages
and different AAC strategies and techniques across
different environments. Clearly the linguistic,
operational, and social demands to attain
communicative competence are multiplied when
individuals with complex communication needs
come from bilingual or multilingual environments.
Estrella (2000) poignantly described the challenges:
Prior to starting preschool, my family and
friends all spoke to me in Spanish. That was
all I knew. So you can imagine my reaction
when I started going to preschool. I was
entering uncharted territories. I was about to
be left with total strangers, foreigners! It was
doubtful that anyone would know any
Spanish, so what was the likelihood of
somebody understanding my little signs for
when I needed something, like lunch! What
if I need to go to the little boys’ room and
they think I’m having a seizure! These were
the concerns that a little boy had to deal with
and figure out how to cope with his new
surroundings. …I felt isolated since I
couldn’t tell anybody what I was thinking or
feeling. (p. 33).
Soto and Yu (2014) highlighted the benefits
of bilingual intervention for individuals with
communication disabilities. However, they noted
that in order to provide effective bilingual
intervention, AAC professionals must develop the
competencies required to provide culturally
competent services, specifically the skills to: (a)
accurately assess communication skills of
individuals with complex communication needs
who come from diverse cultural and linguistic
backgrounds; (b) support language development
and/or recovery across the languages of the family
and broader social community; (c) select,
customize, and implement culturally appropriate
AAC strategies and techniques to support
communication across diverse environments; and
(d) work effectively with families from diverse
backgrounds. The increased diversity of the
population that would benefit from AAC, in terms
of age, disability, language, and culture has
increased the urgent need for high quality
preservice and inservice training to ensure that
professionals from multiple disciplines have the
competencies required to provide effective,
culturally-competent, evidence-based AAC services
to foster communicative competence with
individuals across the life span, who present with a
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
17
wide array of needs and skills (Costigan & Light,
2010; Soto & Yu, 2014).
Changes in the Scope of Communication Needs
Along with the changes in the demographics
of the population that requires AAC have come
dramatic changes in the scope of the
communication needs that must be addressed.
Twenty five years ago, there was an emphasis on
providing the means to express needs and wants;
increasingly there is a growing recognition that
communication extends well beyond needs and
wants, and must serve to foster the development of
social relationships, the exchange of information
and participation in social etiquette routines (De
Leo, Lubas, & Mitchell, 2012; Waller et al., 2013).
Perhaps the mother of Brian, an 8-year-old boy with
severe multiple disabilities, summed it up best when
she said, “There’s more to life than cookies.”
(Light, Parsons & Drager, 2002; p. 187). In fact,
with the advent of social media and a new arsenal of
tools to link people together, there is increased
emphasis in society on establishing, maintaining,
and developing social connections across a wide
ranging network (Sundqvist & Ronnberg, 2010;
Williams et al., 2012).
Twenty-five years ago, the focus was
primarily on maximizing the communication of
individuals with complex communication needs
within face to face interactions. Now there is
increased recognition that communication needs
extend well beyond face to face interactions and
also include written communication to meet
demands at school or in the work place; social
media such as Facebook and Instagram to network,
share experiences, and establish membership in peer
communities; cell phone and texting to connect with
friends; blogging to provide commentary and build
communities with like interests; Twitter to
instantaneously update status and express short
bursts of opinion; e-commerce to fulfill a wide array
of needs and wants, and so on (Light &
McNaughton, 2012a).
Implications of the changing scope of
communication for communicative competence.
With the dramatic change in the scope of
communication and the explosion of tools through
which to meet communication needs, individuals
with complex communication needs now have
access potentially to a much wider and more diverse
audience than ever before. They have mechanisms
available to address what was previously one of the
greatest barriers – that of limited social networks
and communication partners (Blackstone & Hunt
Berg, 2003). Glenda Watson Hyatt (2011) who uses
a variety of AAC technologies (including the iPad)
to communicate described the deeper level of
communication possible as a result of the greater
range of social media tools:
Communicative Competence
18
The cool thing was … I had Internet access.
When asked what I had been up to, I
responded ‘problogging and ghost writing,’
and I was able to show what I had written. I
also shared the video of me ziplining across
Robson Square in downtown Vancouver
during the Winter Olympics. The iPad
allowed for a deeper level of communication
than would have been possible with a single-
function AAC device. (p.25)
With access to an increased array of
potential partners, however, have come increased
demands for independent and easily intelligible
communication. In using these media tools,
individuals with complex communication needs
cannot co-construct messages with familiar partners
as they do in face to face interactions; rather they
must develop the skills to independently use these
new tools, adhere to their conventions, and
communicate with a broader audience including
those who may have limited or no prior experience
with AAC. In general terms, establishing greater
independence and intelligibility of communication
to reach a wider audience requires more advanced
linguistic skills, specifically the ability to
effectively convey meaning through traditional
orthography with appropriate form and content as
required by the target media and audience (Fager,
Bardach, Russell, & Higginbotham, 2012).
Interestingly, many of these new social
media do not rely solely on linguistic content to
communicate; rather linguistic content may be
supplemented with extensive use of visual images
(i.e., photos, video) as channels of expression. This
trend towards increased use of photos and video has
some potential advantages for individuals with
complex communication needs for use of visual
images such as photos to enhance communication
has a long history in the AAC field (Hanson, et al.,
2013). With the advent of many social media
applications, photo and video have become widely-
accepted channels of expression across society
(Light & McNaughton, 2012a), and are used to
support communication for educational,
employment, health, and social purposes
(Raghavendra, Newman, Grace, & Wood, 2013).
However, in order to effectively use these
diverse media to enhance communication on social
media platforms (e.g., Facebook, Twitter,
Instagram,), individuals with complex
communication needs typically require functional
literacy skills as well as the ability to capture photo
and video of meaningful events and experiences.
Thus, these media impose increased linguistic
demands (e.g., functional literacy skills; semantic,
syntactic and morphological skills) and increased
operational demands (e.g., capture and posting of
photo and video). Furthermore, for each
communication media, individuals with complex
communication needs must learn the rules of social
use (i.e., with whom to communicate, about what,
when, where, in what form, and for what purposes).
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
19
These rules vary across media: For example, written
papers for school or reports for work require formal
vocabulary, syntax, and morphology, whereas
Twitter is limited to 140 characters, with the use of
sentence fragments and spelling abbreviations
acceptable to provide status updates and express
opinions. Furthermore, individuals who use AAC
must learn the sociolinguistic rules for using each of
these media without the benefit of immediate,
visible, partner feedback. Given the dominance of
social media in today’s society and the potential
benefits for individuals with complex
communication needs, future research is required to
investigate the use of social media and other
mainstream communication tools by individuals
who require AAC.
Changes in AAC Systems
Implicit in considering the dramatic changes
to the scope of communication needs is the
realization that individuals with complex
communication needs can no longer rely on a single
speech generating device to meet their
communication needs if they are to participate fully
within educational, vocational and social contexts
(Williams et al., 2008). Rather they must have
access to a wide range of means to augment and
enhance their communication that may include
unaided AAC (e.g., gestures, signs, speech or
speech approximations), low tech aided AAC
systems (e.g., communication boards or books),
high tech AAC systems (e.g., traditional speech
generating devices, mobile technologies with AAC
apps), and other mainstream communication apps
and social media tools (e.g., Facebook, Twitter,
Instagram, SnapChat).
Implications of changes in AAC systems
for communicative competence. The dramatic
changes in the range of AAC systems/ apps,
communication technologies, and social media tools
bring both benefits and challenges in terms of
building, rebuilding, and sustaining the
communicative competence of individuals who
require AAC. The iPad and mobile technology
revolution and the greater use of social media tools
have positively impacted social awareness and
acceptance of AAC, reducing attitudinal barriers to
AAC use (McNaughton & Light, 2013). Individuals
with complex communication needs may be more
apt to make use of these tools as AAC techniques to
enhance communicative competence as a result.
Rob Rummel-Hudson, a parent of a teenager who
uses AAC, emphasized the positive effects of
mobile technologies on attitudes of individuals with
complex communication needs and their families:
…[the iPad] provides a rather elegant
solution to the social integration problem.
Kids with even the most advanced dedicated
speech device are still carrying around
Communicative Competence
20
something that tells the world ‘I have a
disability.’ Kids using an iPad have a device
that says, ‘I’m cool.’ And being cool, being
like anyone else, means more to them than it
does to any of us. (Rummel-Hudson, 2011;
p.22)
Although there are substantial benefits to the
increased range of AAC systems/ apps, social
media, and mainstream communication tools that
are available to individuals who require AAC, there
are also significant challenges. The increased
diversity of communication tools means
substantially increased operational demands for
individuals with complex communication needs.
Each of the tools is designed with different
representations, organizations, and layouts of
information as well as different access techniques
(e.g., swiping, tapping, double tapping). And each
of these different designs imposes different motor,
cognitive, sensory perceptual and linguistic learning
demands for individuals with complex
communication needs. Typically these tools are not
well integrated, increasing the operational demands
on individuals with complex communication needs
who must not only learn operational skills for each
tool, but also acquire the skills to navigate between
apps or tools as required.
The development of operational competence
lies at the intersection of the demands imposed by
the communication technologies and the intrinsic
skills of the individual who requires AAC.
Traditionally the focus of intervention has been on
teaching individuals with complex communication
needs the necessary motor skills; however, research
demonstrates that visual, cognitive, and linguistic
processing skills also play critical roles in
determining operational competence (e.g., Costigan,
Light, & Newell, 2012; Wilkinson, Light & Drager,
2012).
To date, most attention has focused on
intervention to teach skills to the individual with
complex communication needs. Much less attention
has been directed towards improving the design of
AAC systems specifically and the design of
mainstream social media tools generally to reduce
operational demands, ease learning, and facilitate
use. As Light and McNaughton (2012b) noted, “The
lack of attention to the design of AAC
technologies/apps is rather ironic since this
component of intervention is one that substantially
affects performance and it is also the one that is
most easily amenable to change.” (p. 36). Clearly
future research is required to investigate the basic
visual, cognitive, linguistic and motor processing
demands of AAC systems and to untangle the
effects of specific system components in order to
optimize the designs of AAC systems and social
media tools, and thus support operational
competence for individuals with a wide range of
disabilities.
There is an urgent need to define basic
design specifications to facilitate use across apps
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
21
and social media tools for people with disabilities,
and to support rapid individualization that will
provide access to persons with specific disabilities
and strengths (Emiliani, Stephanidis, &
Vanderheiden, 2011; Vanderheiden et al.,
2012).Without these principles in place, individuals
with complex communication needs are forever
playing catch up, trying to learn new operational
requirements as new technologies emerge, or they
are excluded from access to apps and social media
tools when the designs impose demands outside of
their motor, sensory perceptual, linguistic and
cognitive capabilities. With increased diversity in
the scope of communication needs and increased
availability of a wide range of AAC systems and
social media tools to meet these needs, there is even
greater need than ever before for the input of
multidisciplinary teams with expertise in a wide
range of domains extending well beyond expertise
in traditional speech and language skills to include
expertise in literacy skills, human computer
interface, visual cognitive processing, motor
performance, and instructional design, to name just
a few. No longer can AAC intervention be limited
in focus to the use of speech generating devices in
face to face interactions; rather intervention must
extend well beyond speech prostheses to maximize
communication across a broad array of media
(Shane, Blackstone, Vanderheiden, Williams, &
DeRuyter, 2012). Concerted advocacy is required to
ensure that public policy and funding agencies keep
pace with these developments; they must recognize
and support access to the wide breadth of
communication tools required for full participation
in educational, vocational, and social contexts
(Vanderheiden et al., 2013).
Changes in Expectations for Participation
Twenty five years ago, many individuals
with complex communication needs lived in large
residential institutions, segregated from their
families and communities with limited educational
and vocational options (Mirenda, 2014). Now,
however, increasing numbers of individuals with
complex communication needs live within their
communities (Lakin & Stancliffe, 2007); attend
schools with the other children in the neighborhood
and participate in general education classrooms
(e.g., Calculator, 2009); obtain full time or part time
work through community jobs, telework, or micro-
enterprises (e.g., Isakson, Burgstahler, & Arnold,
2006; McNaughton, Rackensperger, Dorn, &
Wilson, in press); and engage in a wide range of
meaningful activities within the community
(Thirumanickam, Raghavendra, & Olsson, 2011;
Trembath, Balandin, Stancliffe, & Togher, 2010).
Implications of changing participation
patterns for communicative competence. With
these changes in living, schooling, employment and
Communicative Competence
22
community living have come substantial increases
in the communication demands for individuals with
complex communication needs across these
different environments (Johnson, Douglas, Bigby,
& Iacono, 2009; Raghavendra, Virgo, Olsson,
Connell, & Lane, 2011). Twenty five years ago,
many individuals with complex communication
needs only had the opportunity to interact with the
staff in the institutions and residences in which they
lived; they were pre-empted from many
communication opportunities and had only limited
choices. Now, individuals with complex
communication needs require AAC systems to
support their communication and full participation
at home, at school, at work, in health care settings,
and within the community (Collier, Blackstone, &
Taylor, 2012; Collier & Self, 2010). It is no longer
sufficient for individuals with complex
communication needs to have access to the means
to simply request a preferred food or activity; rather
they need access to communication to build
friendships with peers, to learn at school, to share
their expertise on the job, to manage their health
care needs, and to participate successfully as full
citizens of society (Bryen, Chung, & Lever, 2010;
Kennedy, 2010). Individuals with complex
communication needs face increased requirements
for linguistic, operational, social, and strategic
competencies to meet the increased communication
demands of participation in diverse environments
(e.g., home, school, work, community). AAC
interventions must serve to help build the necessary
knowledge, judgment, and skills to ensure the
development of communicative competence. With
increased expectations for full participation in
society, individuals who require AAC now interact
with a much broader range of partners in much
more diverse contexts than ever before and thus
face increased communication demands on a daily
basis as a result. In order to meet these challenges, it
is more critical than ever for individuals with
complex communication needs to develop the
necessary protective factors to fortify their
motivation, attitude, confidence, and resilience in
the face of the adversity that they will no doubt face
at times. Furthermore, there is increased need for
intervention to break down environmental barriers
in society that limit participation and to replace
them with positive supports to enhance the
communicative competence of individuals who
require AAC (Johnson et al., 2009).
Research to Advance Understanding of
Communicative Competence
Over the past 25 years, there has been a
significant increase in research to advance
understanding and enhance the communicative
competence of individuals with complex
communication needs. This research has established
empirical evidence of the positive impact of AAC
(Beukelman et al., 2007; Bopp, Brown, & Mirenda,
2004; Branson & Demchak, 2009; Fried-Oken et
al., 2012; Ganz et al., 2011; Machalicek et al., 2010;
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
23
Roche, et al., 2014; Schlosser, Sigafoos, & Koul,
2009; Walker & Snell, 2013; Wendt, 2009) and has
demonstrated that these gains come at no risk to
speech development or recovery (e.g., Millar, Light,
& Schlosser, 2006; Romski et al., 2010). As a field,
we should take pride in this increased research base
that has resulted in advances in evidence-based
AAC services. Over the past 25 years, we have also
witnessed increased involvement of individuals
with complex communication needs and their
families in these research endeavors, working to
ensure that their voices are heard and their needs
and priorities are addressed (O’Keefe, Kozak &
Schuller, 2007; Rackensperger et al., 2005)
Despite these significant advances, there
remain many unanswered questions regarding
effective interventions to build, rebuild, or sustain
communicative competence with the diverse range
of individuals across the life span who have
developmental, acquired, degenerative, and
temporary disabilities resulting in complex
communication needs. Future research is required to
investigate effective interventions: (a) to enhance
the knowledge, judgment, and skills of individuals
with complex communication needs across all
domains - linguistic, operational, social, and
strategic; (b) to fortify psychosocial supports to
maximize motivation, positive attitudes, confidence,
and resilience; and (c) to eradicate environmental
barriers (i.e., policy, practice, attitude, knowledge
and skill barriers) and ensure appropriate supports
from communication partners in home, school and
community environments to further the
communicative competence of individuals with
complex communication needs.
Conclusions
In conclusion, it is clear that the definition
of communicative competence for individuals who
require AAC, first proposed by Light 25 years ago
(1989), continues to provide a useful framework for
this new era of communication. Despite the
dramatic changes in the demographics of the
population that requires AAC, the scope of
communication needs to be addressed, the range of
AAC systems/ apps and social media tools
available, and the expectations for participation
across a wide range of environments, the essential
goal of intervention has not changed. AAC
interventions must address the development of
adequate, functional communication skills to
support individuals with complex communication
needs in developing, rebuilding, or sustaining
communicative competence to express needs and
wants, develop social closeness, exchange
information, and participate in social etiquette
routines as required.
What has changed dramatically over the past
25 years, however, is how these communication
Communicative Competence
24
goals are achieved. Whereas 25 years ago, the
emphasis of AAC intervention was face to face
interactions, now the scope of communication needs
to be addressed has exploded to include not only
face to face to interactions, but also written
communication, Internet access, social media, cell
phone, texting, blogging, e-commerce, etc. The
expectations for the participation of individuals with
complex communication needs within society also
have dramatically. Whereas 25 years ago, many
individuals who required AAC were living within
large residential institutions with limited
educational and vocational opportunities, now
individuals with complex communication needs
live, go to school, work, and participate within their
communities (Mirenda, 2014). These changes have
resulted in increased communication demands that
must be addressed through AAC intervention to
ensure that individuals with complex
communication needs develop the necessary
knowledge, judgment, and skills to ensure
communicative competence.
Knowledge, Judgment, and Skills that Support
Communicative Competence
As Light (1989) first proposed,
communicative competence rests on the integration
of knowledge, judgment, and skills in four
interrelated domains: linguistic, operational, social,
and strategic. These four fundamental domains have
not changed over the past 25 years. What has
changed however is the breadth of linguistic,
operational, social and strategic skills required to
attain communicative competence. Table 1 provides
a summary of the knowledge, judgment and skills
required to attain communicative competence as
well as examples to illustrate.
INSERT TABLE 1 HERE
Linguistic domain. As noted earlier, the
attainment of communicative competence is
predicated, at least in part, upon linguistic skills,
including receptive and expressive skills in the
spoken and written language(s) of the individual’s
home and broader social community as well as
skills in the language code of the AAC systems
used to communicate in these environments. The
demand for linguistic skills has increased
significantly over the past 25 years. As individuals
with complex communication needs expand their
social circles and interact with a broader audience in
a wider range of environments, there are increased
demands for independent, intelligible messages
utilizing appropriate vocabulary, syntax, and
morphology as defined by the tools and contexts of
communication. There are increased demands for
the development of literacy skills to facilitate access
to the vast array of information technologies and
social media (Williams et al., 2012). Furthermore,
with increased globalization of society worldwide,
more and more individuals with complex
communication needs live, go to school, and work
in bilingual and multilingual communities (e.g.,
Soto & Yu, 2014); they require receptive and
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
25
expressive skills in more than one language and
AAC systems to support their communication needs
across different environments, thus magnifying the
linguistic demands.
Operational domain. Beyond linguistic
skills, individuals with complex communication
needs also require operational skills to support
communicative competence including skills in the
production of unaided modes of communication and
skills in access and technical operation of aided
AAC systems. The need for operational skills has
not changed over the past 25 years; however, with
the explosion of mobile technologies and social
media tools available and the current lack of
universal design features across these technologies,
individuals with complex communication needs
face increased operational demands to effectively
and efficiently access and control these diverse
technologies (Emiliani et al., 2011).
Social domain. While linguistic and
operational skills ensure that individuals with
complex communication needs have access to the
necessary tools to communicate, it is social skills
that allow individuals with complex communication
needs to use these tools effectively to meet
communication goals. With the dramatic changes in
the scope of communication and the media through
which communication goals are attained,
individuals with complex communication needs
face increased demands in the social arena as well;
they must learn with whom, about what, where,
when, why and via what media to communicate (or
not to communicate). They must learn to assess the
demands of diverse audiences. With access to a
much greater audience, they may face attitudinal
barriers within society in many different
environments (educational, vocational, social) and
may need to develop increased sociorelational skills
to put partners at ease and build positive
relationships (Light et al., 2007; Senner, 2011).
Strategic domain. Despite intervention to
build, re-build and /or sustain linguistic,
operational, and social skills, individuals with
complex communication needs will inevitably
encounter situations where they face significant
limitations that negatively impact their
communicative competence; these situations require
strategic competence. As the scope of
communication needs, expectations for participation
and the resulting communication demands have all
increased, it is inevitable that there will be increased
demands for effective coping strategies to ensure
successful communication in the face of significant
limitations. There is an urgent need for research to
investigate strategic competence (Mirenda & Bopp,
2003); the field has much to learn from individuals
who require AAC who have attained
communicative competence and effectively meet
Communicative Competence
26
their communication goals across a wide range of
environments via various media (Rackensperger et
al., 2005; Smith & Connolly, 2008).
Psychosocial Factors that Support
Communicative Competence
Linguistic, operational, social and strategic
competence may be mitigated by a range of
psychosocial factors including motivation, attitude,
confidence, and resilience (Light, 2003). Table 2
provides a summary of psychosocial factors that
may impact the attainment of communicative
competence as well as examples to illustrate. With
the increased demands of communication and the
increased expectations for participation, individuals
with complex communication needs will inevitably
face increased communication challenges. As a
result, psychosocial factors such as motivation,
attitude, confidence and resilience will play an even
greater role in the attainment of communicative
competence than in the past. Intervention is required
to foster these protective factors to ensure that
individuals with complex communication needs
have the drive to communicate, the willingness to
use AAC, the actual propensity to do so, and the
perseverance to communicate despite the many
challenges and potential failures encountered
(Hodge, 2007; Smith & Connolly, 2008). These
issues have largely been neglected in the field to
date; future research is required to advance
understanding of these psychosocial factors and to
improve current practices.
INSERT TABLE 2 HERE
Environmental Supports for Communicative
Competence
Since communication is a reciprocal
process, communicative competence rests not just
on factors related to the individual who requires
AAC, but also on extrinsic factors related to the
environment and communication partners
(Blackstone et al., 2007). Policy, practice, attitude,
skill and knowledge barriers may impede the
realization of communicative competence by
individuals who require AAC, whereas
environmental and partner supports may serve to
bolster the development, rebuilding, or maintenance
of communicative competence by those with
developmental, acquired, or degenerative
disabilities (Beukelman & Mirenda, 2013).
Environmental supports play an even greater role in
the face of the increased communication challenges
confronted by individuals who use AAC, especially
for those who are most vulnerable. Table 3 provides
a summary of environmental supports that may
facilitate the development of communicative
competence as well as examples to illustrate.
INSERT TABLE 3 HERE
Future Challenges
There is no doubt that the bar has been
raised. Individuals who require AAC bring a vast
array of needs and skills to their communication
interactions that may include significant strengths
and/ or limitations in motor, sensory perceptual,
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
27
cognitive, and/or language skills. The challenge is
to develop effective evidence-based, culturally-
competent AAC interventions to support these
individuals in the realization of communicative
competence to allow them to express their needs
and wants, develop social closeness, exchange
information, and participate in social etiquette
routines as desired at home, at school, at work
and/or in the community.
Twenty five years ago, the field was focused
on demonstrating what was possible with access to
appropriate AAC interventions (Mirenda, 2014).
Now the possible is established, the challenge is to
ensure that the possible becomes the probable and
that every individual with complex communication
needs has access to effective evidence-based AAC
intervention to maximize participation and
communication (Beukelman et al., 2007; Rispoli,
Franco, van der Meer, Lang, & Camargo, 2010).
There remain far too many individuals with
complex communication needs who do not receive
the effective, culturally competent, evidence-based
AAC services that they require to realize
communicative competence and achieve their full
potential (Baxter, Enderby, Evans, & Judge, 2012;
Hodge, 2007). Communicative competence is
essential to the enhancement of the quality of life of
individuals with complex communication needs; it
is fundamental to the attainment of the basic human
need, the basic human right, the basic human power
of communication. As Bob Williams articulated so
eloquently,
Having the power to speak one’s heart and
mind changes the disability equation
dramatically. In fact, it is the only thing I
know that can take a sledgehammer to the
age-old walls of myths and stereotypes and
begin to shatter the silence that looms so
large in many people’s lives. (B. Williams,
2000; p. 249).
Communicative Competence
28
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Communicative Competence
40
Table 1. Knowledge, judgment, and skills required for individuals who use AAC to attain communicative
competence (adapted from Light & Gulens, 2002).
Domain
Examples of knowledge, judgment, and skills required
Linguistic
Develop skills in the native language(s) spoken and written in the home and
broader social community
Understand the form, content, and use of spoken language(s) used by others
both at home and in the broader social community
Develop as many expressive skills (content, form, and use) in the spoken
language(s) of the home and broader social community as appropriate
Code switch between different language(s) and cultures as required
Develop literacy skills to understand and use the written language(s) of the
home and broader social community; code switch between these written
language(s) as required
Develop skills in the language code of the AAC systems for home and the
broader social community
Develop lexical knowledge of the symbols used to express concepts via
AAC
Develop semantic, syntactic, and morphological skills to express more
complex meanings via AAC
Choose appropriate AAC systems to meet the needs of different cultural
/linguistic environments
Learn the appropriate linguistic conventions for different communication
and social media tools
Operational
Produce unaided symbols. For example,
Plan and produce the required hand shape, position, orientation, and
movement to produce manual signs or conventional gestures
Plan and produce the required body movements to act out messages via
pantomime
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
41
Plan and produce the required body movements to produce other unaided
codes (e.g., eye blink codes, looking up to say yes)
Operate aided AAC systems /apps accurately and efficiently. For example,
Open communication board, turn pages, and point to target AAC symbol
Pick up target symbol and hand it to partner when using PECS
Use paper and pencil to draw concept
Use selection technique to access required AAC symbols (e.g., direct
selection with finger, fist, toe or eyes; row column scanning with a single
switch; directed scanning with a joystick)
Navigate within AAC systems/ apps as required
Operate social media and other mainstream communication tools
Access social media /communication tools as required
Capture and upload photos and video as required to support communication
via social media
Navigate between apps/ tools as required to meet needs
Social
Develop appropriate sociolinguistic skills
Fulfill obligatory and nonobligatory turns in interaction
Initiate and terminate interactions appropriately
Maintain and develop topics of conversation
Express a wide range of communicative functions (e.g., request information,
protest, request objects/actions, provide information, provide clarification,
confirm/deny, request attention)
Choose appropriate AAC systems /apps and/ or social media tools to meet
communication needs as required
Use appropriate form, content, and conventions as required for the audience
and media
Develop appropriate sociorelational skills
Communicative Competence
42
Participate actively in interactions
Be responsive to partners
Demonstrate interest in partners (e.g., ask partner-focused questions)
Put partners at ease
Project a positive self-image
Maintain a positive rapport with partners
Strategic
Use compensatory strategies to bypass limitations in the linguistic domain. For
example,
Ask partner to write /type or point to symbols to augment spoken input and
bypass comprehension difficulties
Use mementos to bypass vocabulary limitations and establish the topic
Ask partner to provide choices to overcome vocabulary limitations
Ask the partner to guess and provide clues to bypass vocabulary limitations
Use compensatory strategies to bypass limitations in the operational domain.
For example,
Use telegraphic messages to enhance rate of communication
Ask partner to predict as message is spelled to reduce fatigue and enhance
rate of communication
Have partner assist in locating appropriate page to help with navigational
demands
Use compensatory strategies to bypass limitations in social domain
Use an introduction strategy to put the partner at ease
Use humor to maintain a positive rapport and put partner at ease
Utilize social media to increase social network
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
43
Table 2. Psychosocial factors and the potential impact on communicative competence (adapted from Light,
2003)
Psychosocial factor
Definition
Potential impact
Motivation to
communicate
Drive to communicate, influenced
by the belief that the goal (i.e.,
communication) is important and
attainable
Defines the individual’s desire to
communicate with others in
specific situations
Attitude toward
AAC
Ideas about AAC charged with
emotion (positive or negative) that
predispose AAC use (or lack of
use) in a given situation
Influences the individual’s
willingness to use (or not use) AAC
to communicate with others in
specific situations
Communication
confidence
Self-assurance based on the
individual’s belief that
communication success is
achievable within a given situation
Influences the propensity of the
individual to actually act (i.e.,
communicate) in specific situations
Resilience
Capacity to prevent, minimize, or
overcome the damaging effects of
adversities; capacity to compensate
for problems and recover from
failures
Influences the individual’s
persistence with communication in
the face of barriers, adversities, and
failures
Communicative Competence
44
Table 3. Environmental supports that may facilitate the communicative competence of individuals who require
AAC (adapted from Light, 2003)
Environmental factor
Examples of environmental supports
Policy
Legislation that supports accessibility and inclusion of individuals
who require AAC
Policies that ensure funding of AAC systems and assistive
technologies
Legislation that prohibits discrimination against individuals with
disabilities
Policies that support universal design of technologies
Practice
Evidence-based, consumer responsive, culturally competent service
delivery by multidisciplinary team with expertise in AAC
Funding support for AAC systems/ assistive technologies and
services
Availability of technologies that are accessible for individuals with
disabilities
Attitude
Advocacy and public education activities to promote awareness of the
rights and capabilities of individuals with disabilities
Meaningful opportunities for communication and interaction with
peers
Appropriate expectations in the home, school, work and community
Knowledge
Knowledge of funding sources and AAC resources
Knowledge of AAC symbols and transmission techniques
Knowledge of positioning requirements
Knowledge of strategies for vocabulary selection, layout,
organization, and regular updating
This paper should be referenced as
Light, J., & McNaughton, D. (2014). Communicative competence for individuals who require augmentative and alternative
communication: A new definition for a new era of communication?. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, 30, 1-
18. doi:10.3109/07434618.2014.885080
45
Knowledge of operation and programming of AAC technologies
Knowledge of daily care and maintenance routines
Strategies for technical trouble shooting
Strategies for integrating AAC into daily use
Skills
Partners who use interaction strategies to support successful
communication (e.g., wait for individual to communicate, recognize
and respond to communicative attempts, provide appropriate
language input, augment input if required, confirm their
understanding)
... When individuals use the AAC system to meet communication needs, turn taking, and maintain a conversation, they are demonstrating social competence. Strategic competence is the ability to find a way to convey one's thoughts despite the limitations of the AAC system in each of the three other domains (Light and McNaughton 2014). ...
... Communication confidence is the third psychosocial factor and contributes to whether a person believes they can achieve effective communication skills. The last psychosocial factor is resilience and relates to one's internal ability to overcome communication adversities and continue to try to communicate despite barriers (Light and McNaughton 2014). ...
... AAC acceptance has increased in many settings including schools, medical facilities, day programs, vocational sites and in community settings (Light and McNaughton 2014). AAC technologies have also improved; however, obtaining the goal of communicative competence across skill domains continues to allude many (Light and McNaughton 2014). ...
Article
The purpose of the study was to review available literature on aided AAC intervention for adults with developmental disabilities excluding autism. Nineteen studies were included with 43 participants in a 30-year period. Most studies were single-subject design and interventions varied widely. Most interventions focused on social or linguistic skills. Relatively limited research has addressed aided AAC interventions for adults with DD. It is necessary to further investigate intervention techniques for this population.
... As it applies to AAC intervention, communicative competence is built on the idea that the functionality (e.g., skills that are valued by the person using AAC) and adequacy (e.g., communication skills required to meet environmental demands) of communication depend upon sufficient knowledge, judgement, and skills of the individual using AAC within four domains of competence: linguistic, operational, social, and strategic (Light, 1989). In this model, linguistic competence refers to mastery of the linguistic code (e.g., semantics, syntax, morphology) of both their native language and their AAC system (Light & McNaughton, 2014). Operational competence refers to the technical skills required to use an AAC system, such as navigating across pages or selecting icons. ...
... Focusing on communicative competence in intervention emphasizes an individual's performance with their device, mastery of language skills, and device operation (Light, 1989;Light & McNaughton, 2014). While emphasizing communicative competence in intervention has had positive impacts on communication outcomes for individuals who use AAC, it falls short in that it does not consider the way communication is collaboratively co-constructed, or created within a partnership, between individuals (Teachman & Gibson, 2014). ...
... This is consistent with the way exemplary teachers have been described as structuring their classrooms based around meaning as opposed to focusing on covering curriculum (Allington & Johnston, 2001), yet this focus on meaning rather than targeted skills is in stark contrast with the way that AAC-based interventions have traditionally been approached. For example, the interventions that have focused on a child's communicative competence with their AAC technology have emphasized the child's performance with their AAC technology and mastery of language skills (Light, 1989;Light & McNaughton, 2014). In these interventions, the individual child who uses AAC is independently responsible for demonstrating and improving their communicative competence. ...
Thesis
Full-text available
Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) technologies for children with complex communication needs (CCN) can improve communication skills, increase autonomy, promote social closeness, and enhance meaningful participation in a variety of social contexts. However, access to AAC technologies is insufficient. Successful use of AAC technologies also requires ongoing support from communication partners (i.e., parents, teachers, or speech and language pathologists [SLPs]) who are knowledgeable of AAC. Understanding what communication partners can do to support successful interactions in conversation is important for improving experiences and outcomes in communication for children who use AAC and their various communication partners. One way to develop understandings of what comprises successful interactions with children who use AAC is to observe their interactions with highly skilled communication partners. The group of SLPs who are considered exemplary by their peers due to their expertise in AAC, communication, and language development includes many such highly skilled communication partners. Identifying the ways these exemplary partners support AAC-mediated interactions may improve understanding of how to promote successful interactions mediated by aided AAC technologies with a range of communication partners. This study examined the nature of interactions between children who use aided AAC technologies and their exemplary AAC SLPs. Using a multi-case design, dyads (n = 3) of exemplary AAC SLPs and children who used robust AAC technologies were video recorded during typical speech therapy sessions that included a semi-structured collage-making activity designed to elicit conversation. Videos were transcribed and analyzed using microanalysis to examine how the interactions unfolded and the ways the SLPs supported each child's communication. The results highlight the nuance in how the SLPs and children collaborated to make meaning and suggest that exemplary AAC SLPs individualize their intervention sessions, prioritize dynamic, dialogic interactions over mastery of targeted skills, and consistently use aided language modeling, without expecting specific responses. This study also highlights the importance of attuning for fostering relationships and shared meaning. This study adds to understanding of how SLPs can support children who use robust AAC technologies as communication partners in interactions that are meaningful and dynamic.
... [8,9] Interpersonal communication competence is the process of exchange of information, ideas, and feelings between two or more people through verbal or nonverbal methods; thus, it plays an important role in establishing and maintaining personal relationship and problem-solving. [10] Therefore, it is understood that having BIF can create barriers to an interpersonally fulfilling life. Consequently, impairing the sociooccupational functioning in these individuals, which requires the attention of mental health professionals (MHPs). ...
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Background Borderline intellectual functioning (BIF) is associated with deficits in cognitive functions and effective communication or interpersonal skills, impacting socio-occupational functioning in adulthood. Aims The current study compared individuals with BIF and average intellectual functioning (AIF) on executive functioning, emotion dysregulation, and interpersonal communication competence in relation to the quality of life. Settings and Design The data were collected via a face-to-face interview conducted in the tertiary care hospital in an urban locality. A cross-sectional and comparative matched-group research design using purposive sampling was used. Materials and Methods An estimated sample size of 80 was split into BIF and AIF groups. The participants were recruited as per the defined criteria. The measures used were Raven’s Standard Progressive Matrices, General Health Questionnaire, Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview, Stroop Test (ST), Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale (DERS), Interpersonal Communication Competence Scale (ICCS), and World Health Organization Quality of Life- Brief (Qol). Statistical Analysis The differences, between BIF and AIF groups as well as males and females within each group, on measures, namely, ST, DERS, ICCS, and QoL were compared using the independent t -test. Further, the relationship among the measures was examined using Pearson correlation and regression analysis. Results Independent t -test analysis revealed significant differences between groups on execution functioning ( t = 11.83, P = 0.000), all domains of emotional dysregulation ( P < 0.000), and many domains of interpersonal communication, and quality of life ( P < 0.000). Significant correlations were found between domains of DERS and ICCS, DERS and QOL; ICCS and QOL. Conclusions Emotional dysregulation predicted physical and psychological health and the environment, while interpersonal communication predicted social relations.
... Successful communication is always at least partly dependent on the skills of the partner (Kent-Walsh et al., 2015), and this is especially true for young children who are just beginning to learn and demonstrate early communication skills. However, all children, regardless of age, must receive the needed technology and instructional support to participate in a wide range of activities with a wide variety of communication partners (Light & McNaughton, 2014). The communication skills learned at this age are important both in early childhood, and to support social interaction, desired educational and vocational outcomes, and community participation across the lifespan (Gillespie-Lynch et al., 2012;Laubscher et al., 2019). ...
Article
We used the Council for Exceptional Children (CEC) Standards for evidence-based practices (EBP) in Special Education to evaluate the effectiveness of research on the use of visual scene displays (VSDs) and video VSDs with young children with autism spectrum disorder and/or intellectual and developmental disability (ASD/IDD). VSDs and video VSDs are designed to support communication for individuals with speech or speech-related disabilities. In a high-tech VSD approach, images are programmed (on a tablet computer) with "hotspots" that produce speech when touched. Twelve of the 14 articles located for the review met all eight quality indicators as identified by the CEC Standards for evidence-based practices, and presented positive results for 37 of the 42 participants. We conclude that the use of VSDs and video VSDs can be considered an EBP in communication intervention for young children with ASD/IDD during social interaction activities commonly observed in early childhood settings.
... This ensures that they can effectively convey their message and successfully achieve the objective of clear and pleasant communication. The references used are Fauria and Zellner (2015) and Light and McNaughton (2014). To illustrate the importance of communication skills and competences in academic settings, it is essential for every academic community to prioritize effective and successful communication, both in written and spoken forms. ...
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... The procedure and duration of the studies can also influence performance as several studies have observed a clear learning effect with eye typing systems, as user performance increases over time and with more repetitions [15]. It has been noted that this learning effect could represent the reinforcement of motivation, which has been shown to be an important factor impacting communication among AAC users [57]. Familiarity with keyboard layout can also positively impact performance [77]. ...
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... The manual guided them to implement the intervention systematically, introducing STT first and text-to-speech in the fourth session. The instructions were sequential, implementing the three-step process to enhance operational and strategic competence [56,57]. The introduction of text-to-speech at a slightly later stage than STT during the intervention was purely pedagogically motivated to ensure that the students gradually acquired proficiency in the technology. ...
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... Using an AAC system is a complex process that relies on a number of different abilities or competencies. The application of a communicative competence approach to AAC is best attributed to Janice Light's work (Light, 1989;Light and McNaughton, 2014). Light herself draws on the following definition of competence as the quality or state of being functionally adequate or of having sufficient knowledge, judgement or skill (Webster's Third New International Dictionary of the English Language, 1966, p. 463). ...
... Interactive AAC tools provide an important avenue in facilitating communication for individuals with speech and language disabilities. These systems range from low-tech picture boards [37] to high-tech speech-generating devices [33] and have been at the forefront of efforts to empower those with communication impairments [22]. ...
Conference Paper
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Conference Paper
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This article focuses on culturally responsive AAC practice. Including parents in the process is essential to ensure that children with significant communication impairments receive the most appropriate communication tool and the most effective intervention strategies. Often, the roles expected or demanded from parents may conflict with the values, expectations, and abilities of many families, particularly those from culturally diverse backgrounds, which may contribute to low levels of participation. If clinicians are to work effectively with families from a range of different backgrounds, they need not only a greater understanding of culture and cultural values as they relate to AAC, but an increased awareness of the cultural influences affecting their own practices and recommendations. In this article, I describe the process of culturally responsive assessment and intervention and discuss the need for professionals to build opportunities for a truly reciprocal collaborative relationship with families.
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