CAA Livrotreino

Alternative communication for families, clinics and schools.

We help people with speech disability communicate with more autonomy.

For parents and caregivers

Organize routines by child and personalize categories and pictograms.

For professionals

Speech therapists and clinical teams can standardize templates and accelerate care plans.

Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC)

Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) is a set of tools and strategies (pictures, apps, gestures) that helps people with speech difficulties (autism, cerebral palsy, aphasia) express themselves.

It is a human right that promotes citizenship, autonomy and reduces frustration, and it can expand verbal repertoire or replace speech.

Main AAC Aspects

  • What it is: A tool that gives voice to those who do not use speech functionally.
  • Who it is for: Children and adults with autism spectrum disorder, cerebral palsy, stroke or speech disorders.
  • Resources: They can be low-tech (printed boards, PECS) or high-tech (tablets/phones with apps such as TD Snap and Let Me Talk).
  • Myths: AAC does not prevent speech; on the contrary, it stimulates communication development and has no cognitive prerequisites.

AAC should preferably be implemented with support from speech therapists and can be used in school settings for inclusion.

Profiles per child
Each child has independent content and progress.
Visual library
Categories and pictograms with color and image customization.
Reusable templates
Create business and open standards for new cases.