Absolutely.
One of the biggest misconceptions about autism is that all autistic children are non-speaking or have very limited speech. While some autistic children do experience significant speech and language delays, many autistic children are highly verbal and can speak fluently.
The important thing to understand is that communication is about much more than words.
At Amazing K, we often explain that autism does not simply affect whether a child can speak. It can also affect how a child communicates, listens, responds, shares ideas, understands conversations, and interacts with others.
Some autistic children have extensive vocabularies and use language far beyond what might be expected for their age. Parents sometimes describe these children as having “swallowed a dictionary” because of the sophisticated words and phrases they use. Others may speak fluently about topics that interest them but struggle to engage in everyday conversation.
One difference we often observe is that communication can become one-sided. A child may have a great deal to say but may not naturally engage in the back-and-forth flow of conversation. They may continue speaking about a favourite interest regardless of the topic being discussed or answer questions in ways that redirect the conversation back to a preferred subject.
For example, a child who loves video games may happily discuss every detail of their favourite game but struggle to answer questions about their day, their feelings or what happened at school. The challenge is not necessarily producing speech. The challenge is using language flexibly and socially.
We also see children who appear to be having conversations with their peers, but when you listen carefully, each child may be talking about a completely different topic. While everyone is speaking, very little shared communication is taking place.
Communication involves far more than words. It includes listening, understanding, taking turns in conversation, responding appropriately to questions, sharing experiences, expressing feelings, understanding another person’s perspective and adjusting communication to different situations.
For this reason, speech and communication should never be viewed as the same thing. A child may have very limited speech but excellent communication skills, while another child may have extensive verbal language but still experience significant communication difficulties.
Autism affects every child differently. Some autistic children are non-speaking, some use a combination of speech and alternative communication methods, and others are highly verbal. What matters is not simply whether a child can talk, but how they use communication to connect with the people around them.