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How ableism impacts people who use AAC (McLeod, 2025)

Picture of Lateef McLeod and screenshot of quote  that reads "People who use AAC should be
at the decision table regarding
everything that involves us as a
community...​

The only way we can have an
anti-ableist future is for disabled
people to lead the way.”
McLeod, L. (2025). How Ableism impacts people who use AAC. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, early online.​
https://doi.org/10.1080/07434618.2025.2489662​

Dr. Lateef McLeod  describes the impact of Ableism, and strategies for moving the field of AAC forward: Now free at the AAC journal

Abstract
Ableism is a form of oppression with pernicious consequences for people who use AAC. Historically, Ableist ideologies led to attempts to erase disability from the social fabric (e.g., the Eugenics movement). Speechism is the prejudice and discrimination of people because their language, use of language, or mode of expression is deemed inferior. Speechism and Ableism obstruct the true reality of the experiences of people who use AAC. Ableism presumes that the abled-bodied experience is the only legitimate and valid experience and does not recognize that many disabled people experience their lives very differently. This perspective makes invisible the ableist experiences that disabled people have to face in many facets of our lives. This problem is compounded for people who use AAC who may face challenges explaining the full extent and impact of these ableist experiences. As an AAC community, we must confront Ableism in our field and industry by always prioritizing the lived experiences of people who use AAC in the development of AAC technology and policy. People who use AAC must be at the decision table regarding everything that involves us as a community. We can have an anti-ableist future only if disabled people to lead the way

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This paper was first presented at the Future of AAC Research Summit

For more information (including a video presentation of this publication), please visit https://aac-learning-center.psu.edu/2024/10/07/how-ableism-impacts-people-who-use-aac-mcleod-2024/

Please cite as

McLeod, L. (2025). How Ableism impacts people who use AAC. Augmentative and Alternative Communication, early online. https://doi.org/10.1080/07434618.2025.2489662