ableU has a new home. See what changed.

On DemandAutismFree · ASHA CEUs

Behaviors Are Communication! How the SLP Can Support Students!

In this session, participants will explore the neurological impact of crisis on a child's brain, including differences seen in the neurodivergent population. The session will cover strategies to de-escalate situations and ensure safety for students and staff. Participants will also learn proactive approaches to prevent crises and foster a supportive school culture for both staff and students.

Credit
0.1 ASHA CEUs
Length
1 Hour
Available
10/28/24-9/30/29
Intermediate Level
ASHA CE Approved

Presented by

Margaret Mcgarvie
Margaret Mcgarvie
Speech-Language Pathologist

Maggie McGarvie is a pediatric speech-language pathologist with 16 years experience working in various settings. She has worked in three different states and in schools, private practices, preschools, and early intervention. She has a passion for working with Autistic children and their families to help maximize connection and communication in all environments. Maggie is employed at a local school system.

Built for you

Who this course is for

Every minute is written for working clinicians, educators, and families. You walk away with real-world tools to try with your next learner, not abstract theory.

Speech-Language Pathologists

Behavior Specialists

Educators

Parents & Caregivers

After this course

What you’ll walk away with.

You leave with concrete skills and frameworks you can apply in your next session, classroom, or family visit, not just ideas to think about later.

Earn your CEUs

Attend the full course and pass the post-session assessment at 80% or higher. Your 0.1 ASHA CEUs are reported to ASHA when you opt in on the assessment.

  1. 01

    You’ll be able to

    Identify and describe the neurological effects of crisis on a child's brain.

  2. 02

    You’ll be able to

    Identify strategies to de-escalate and support students.

  3. 03

    You’ll be able to

    Identify techniques to educate staff and students on building a supportive culture.

The full 1 hour

Your learning path.

  1. 1

    Introduction

    8 minutes
  2. 2

    Overview of neurology

    7 minutes
  3. 3

    Neurodivergent brain, Auditory processing, Anxiety, AAC

    10 minutes
  4. 4

    Safety first

    10 minutes
  5. 5

    Keep Calm

    5 minutes
  6. 6

    Video modeling and de-escalation

    10 minutes
  7. 7

    Education and planning ahead

    10 minutes

Earn ASHA CEUs in three steps

Free courses, ASHA CEUs when you opt in.

01

Register & attend

Register in under a minute. Join live or watch on-demand, whichever fits your schedule.

02

Pass the assessment

Complete the short post-course assessment with 80% or higher to confirm mastery.

03

CEUs reported to ASHA

Choose to be reported on the assessment and your 0.1 ASHA CEUs are filed to ASHA for you. No paperwork, no chasing certificates.

Ready when you are

Save your seat. It’s free.

Registration is short and free: no credit card, no trial, nothing to cancel later.

Keep going

More in Autism

View all →
On Demand

From Scripting to Sharing: How AAC Supports Meaningful Gestalt Language Development

This presentation explores how augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) can be effectively integrated to support gestalt language learners as they move from echolalic scripts toward self-generated, meaningful communication. Participants will gain a deeper understanding of the stages of Gestalt Language Processing (GLP), how to identify and honor gestalt communication, and ways to use AAC systems to nurture authentic expression across stages.

Ryann Sutera1.5 Hours · 0.15 ASHA CEUs
On Demand

When AAC Use Looks Different: Navigating Device Refusal, Stimming, and Emerging Communication

What do you do when a child refuses their AAC device? When they stim, script, or communicate in ways that aren't easily captured in data? For many professionals, these moments can feel confusing, frustrating, or like barriers to progress. But what if these behaviors are actually part of the communication journey? This presentation invites participants to reframe device refusal, stimming, and unconventional communication not as problems to fix, but as cues to listen more deeply. Drawing from autistic perspectives and current research, we will explore how to support emerging AAC users in ways that honor autonomy, build trust, and promote meaningful communication. We'll also share goal-writing strategies that move away from compliance-based models and toward affirming, functional supports that reflect real-life communication.

Amy Zembriski1 Hour · 0.1 ASHA CEUs
On Demand

When Models Aren't Sticking: Supporting Minimally Speaking GLPs

Professionals often encounter minimally or non-speaking gestalt language processors (GLPs) who do not progress through Natural Language Acquisition (NLA) stages in typical ways. Despite consistent modeling, regulation, and child-led support, gestalt language development may appear stalled, leaving clinicians and caregivers uncertain about next steps. This 90 minute intensive, led by Katja Piscitelli, M.S., CCC-SLP, provides a structured exploration of intervention strategies for GLPs whose communication development diverges from expected NLA patterns. Participants will examine the intersection of gestalt language processing, motor speech challenges, and neurodiversity-affirming practice.

Katja Piscitelli1.5 Hours · 0.15 ASHA CEUs