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Noticing a Communication Difference in a Child

You Know Your Child Best

If something about your child’s communication, behavior, or development feels different, trust that feeling.

Early signs may include:

These signs do not automatically mean a diagnosis.
But they do mean it’s time to learn more.

Step 1: First, Rule Out Hearing Loss

Start with a hearing test (audiogram). Those are performed by audiologists, and even a mobile hearing test clinic that might be free in your community. Your pediatrician can refer your child for a hearing test, and all health plans including Medicaid pay for this assessment.

Why this matters:

Step 2: Seek a Developmental Evaluation

If hearing is normal, ask your pediatrician for a full evaluation and developmental screening.

This may include:

This evaluation looks at your child as a whole.

What Professionals Look For

Even without a specific diagnosis, professionals assess:

The goal is not just a label; it’s understanding how to support your child.

How Allied Health Support Works

Professional support is about more than just a label; it is about understanding how your child interacts with the world and providing the tools they need to thrive. Even without a specific diagnosis, professionals assess how your child communicates, understands language, engages with others, and learns through play.

Speech-Language Pathology (SLP)

Focus: Communication

An SLP helps your child:

Tools may include:

Communication is more than speech.
It includes any way your child connects.

Occupational Therapy (OT)

Focus: Daily life participation

OT helps your child take part in:

OT may support:

The “Uno” Analogy: How They Work Together

Imagine your child is playing a game of Uno:

Both are Allied Health Professionals covered by most insurance and Medicaid. While school-based services focus on educational goals, private services focus on health and medical needs to meet developmental milestones.

Understanding ADLs vs. IADLs

Understanding Services: School vs. Medical

Both SLP and OT are Allied Health Professionals reimbursed by Medicaid and insurance.

The Goal: “Person-First” approach

When support is done well, learning feels natural and progress happens through connection. Your child has a right to:

The Doogri Approach: Building Connection First

We believe in an alternative to “fixing” problems; we focus on connecting with the child first.

We are an autistic-led non-profit. We provide a curriculum as resources for autistic adults. We ask that parents engage autistic adults in their community in a working contract. The adult will act as a peer support specialist to your child. They will introduce cognitively enriching topics and develop a working relationship with your child as a partner in their identity development. 

A “Person-First” Philosophy: Interest as a Bridge 

At the heart of all these therapies is a fundamental shift from a “problem-first” approach to a Person-First Approach. In this model, the specialist does not need to identify a “deficit” to begin support. Instead, they enter the child’s world through Cognitive Enrichment.

“Some approaches treat what your child loves as something they have to earn. Our approach uses what your child loves to connect with them and help them engage.”

By using a child’s natural passions as the foundation for development, we aren’t targeting missed milestones as a behavior problem. We are building their identity and ensuring their right to a meaningful, self-directed life. Continuing from that person-first philosophy, we can see how the shift from “compliance” to “connection” changes the very nature of learning and growth.

From Rewards to Rights: The Story of the Interest 

To understand this shift, consider a child who is fascinated by car brochures. Under a traditional, compliance-based model, that child might be told they can only look at their brochures after they finish a difficult task, such as a math worksheet. In that scenario, the child is simply holding out for the reward; they often “hate” the activity itself and are merely performing to get to what they actually value.

In our approach, we integrate the interest into the educational encounter itself. The car brochures aren’t the prize at the finish line; they are the vehicle for the journey. We use them to talk about colors, to practice fine motor skills by turning pages, or to facilitate social exchange. We laugh about the names manufacturers give to cars, and ponder the meaning of the car logos. When interest is essential to the activity, the child isn’t just “working”, they are engaging.

Upholding the Rights of the Child

This shift is rooted in a fundamental belief: your child has inherent rights at this stage of their development.

Inherently Rewarding Participation

When these supports are in place, we no longer need to “engineer” motivation through external incentives. Participation becomes naturally rewarding. To ensure this child-centered, person-first philosophy is protected and standardized across the field, there is a growing movement toward advocacy and structural reform within the professional community. Supporting a child’s right to meaningful participation requires a workforce that is equally supported and empowered to maintain professional integrity.

What Should You Do Next?

✔ Get a hearing test (audiogram)
✔ Request a developmental evaluation
✔ Ask questions and stay involved
✔ Learn strategies you can use at home
✔ Connect with professionals who see your child as a whole person

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