All persons, regardless of the extent or
severity of their disabilities, have a basic right to affect, through
communication, the conditions of their own existence. Beyond this
general right, a number of specific communication rights should
be ensured in all daily interactions and interventions involving
persons who have severe disabilities. These basic communication
rights are as follows:
The right to request desired objects,
actions, events, and persons, and to express personal preferences,
or feelings.
The right to be offered choices and
alternatives.
The right to reject or refuse undesired
objects, events, or actions, including the right to decline or
reject all proffered choices.
The right to request, and be given,
attention from and interaction with another person.
The right to request feedback or information
about a state, an object, a person, or an event of interest.
The right to active treatment and intervention
efforts to enable people with severe disabilities to communicate
messages in whatever modes and as effectively and efficiently
as their specific abilities will allow.
The right to have communicative acts
acknowledged and responded to, even when the intent of these acts
cannot be fulfilled by the responder.
The right to have access at all times
to any needed augmentative and alternative communication devices
and other assistive devices, and to have those devices in good
working order.
The right to environmental contexts,
interactions, and opportunities that expect and encourage persons
with disabilities to participate as full communicative partners
with other people, including peers.
The right to be informed about the
people, things, and events in one's immediate environment.
The right to be communicated with in
a manner that recognizes and acknowledges the inherent dignity
of the person being addressed, including the right to be part
of communication exchanges about individuals that are conducted
in his or her presence.
The right to be communicated with in
ways that are meaningful, understandable, and culturally and linguistically
appropriate.
* Source: from National Joint Committee
for the Communication Needs of Persons with Severe Disabilities.
(1992). Guidelines for meeting the communication needs of persons
with severe disabilities. ASHA, 34(March, Supp. 7), 1-8.
Permission to use excerpt granted to the
Indiana Resource Center for Autism by the American Speech-Language-
Hearing Association. (ASHA Help-line 1- 800-638-8255).