Functioning Labels: Why We Need to Leave Them Behind
When we use functioning labels, we are adopting a fundamentally biased view of what support looks like across the entire autistic community. When someone is labeled "high functioning," their need for accommodations is dismissed because according to whoever is doing the labeling, that person functions "almost normally." This framing ignores that autistic people across the entire spectrum face real difficulties navigating a world that was not built for them, both sensorially and structurally. It also overlooks differences in motor development and co-occurring conditions like dyslexia or dyscalculia, which are less visible but no less real. These needs don't disappear because someone can communicate verbally. A concrete example of this are autistic people with less support needs during moments of dysregulation. Because they usually can communicate verbally, it is assumed that they always can, even in the moments when they least can. When they are in the middle of a...