Support students with communication needs in inclusive and special education settings. Isaac AAC integrates smoothly into individual education plans, classroom routines, and school-wide inclusion strategies — backed by decades of research evidence.

Research consistently shows that students with disabilities educated in inclusive classrooms with appropriate communication tools achieve better academic, social, and long-term outcomes. AAC (Augmentative and Alternative Communication) is an evidence-based practice that gives every student a voice — enabling participation in lessons, social interactions, and school life.
Studies show AAC use leads to improved communication skills, decreased challenging behaviors, increased social participation, and better academic engagement in students with complex communication needs (Ganz et al., 2012; Morin et al., 2018).
A common myth is that AAC replaces speech. Research demonstrates the opposite — AAC supports and often facilitates spoken language development. Students who use AAC often develop stronger verbal expression over time.
Inclusive education research (Hehir et al., 2016) shows that including students with disabilities benefits all learners. Non-disabled students develop empathy, communication skills, and social awareness — effects are either neutral or positive.
The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), signed by 161 states, recognizes AAC as essential for inclusive education. Countries like Norway, Portugal, and Malta educate over 80% of students with disabilities in inclusive settings.
Isaac AAC enables students with communication challenges to participate fully in classroom activities, discussions, and learning. The app works during lessons, breaks, group work, and extracurricular activities — giving students a voice throughout the school day.
Align communication goals in Isaac AAC with Individual Education Plans. Document progress with built-in tracking, adapt vocabulary to academic content areas, and generate reports for IEP reviews and parent consultations.
Simple setup, no technical expertise needed. Teachers can manage boards, add school-specific vocabulary (subjects, classroom items, schedules), and switch between student profiles easily. Built-in tutorials guide staff through all features.
License Isaac AAC for your whole school. Affordable plans for special education institutions, mainstream schools with inclusion programs, and mixed-setting schools. Volume pricing available.
Students can use a tablet at school and continue at home on another device. All settings, vocabulary, and progress sync automatically — ensuring consistency between school and home environments.
Isaac AAC's innovative training mode helps students learn to use the system independently. Structured exercises build confidence and communication skills progressively, reducing the need for constant adult facilitation.
Isaac AAC supports students across a wide range of diagnoses and communication needs:
For minimally speaking or non-speaking autistic students, Isaac AAC provides a reliable way to request, comment, answer questions, and participate in classroom activities. Research shows AAC significantly improves socio-communicative behaviors in autistic children (ASHA, 2024).
Students with motor impairments affecting speech benefit from Isaac AAC's customizable interface — larger buttons, simplified layouts, and motor-accessible grid options help students communicate effectively.
Children with dysphagia, apraxia of speech, or severe expressive language delays use Isaac AAC to bridge the communication gap while continuing speech therapy and language development.
Students with Down syndrome, Rett syndrome, Angelman syndrome, and other genetic conditions benefit from AAC's visual communication support. Research confirms AAC facilitates communication abilities in children with Down syndrome without hindering spoken vocabulary.
For students who can speak but are unable to in certain settings, Isaac AAC provides a low-pressure communication alternative that supports participation and reduces anxiety.
Students with combined visual, motor, and communication impairments benefit from Isaac AAC's adaptable interface. AAC teams can customize the system to meet complex individual needs.
Students use Isaac AAC to greet classmates, respond to roll call, share news about their day, and participate in morning discussions — building social routines from the start of each day.
Answer questions, contribute to discussions, present work, and ask for help. Isaac AAC vocabulary can be customized per subject — math terms, science vocabulary, history concepts, literature characters.
Social interaction doesn't stop at the classroom door. Students use Isaac AAC to chat with friends, order food, play games, and navigate everyday social situations independently.
Teachers can add subject-relevant boards — science experiments, math operations, geography terms, music notation. Isaac AAC becomes part of the curriculum, not separate from it.
In Slovakia and Czech Republic, students with special educational needs can use compensatory aids (including AAC devices) during testing, as long as these are listed in their IEP. Isaac AAC qualifies as such an aid.
School trips, drama productions, sports days, art projects — Isaac AAC supports participation in all aspects of school life, not just academics.
Step 1: Assessment. Contact your local CPPPaP (Center for Pedagogical-Psychological Counseling) or equivalent body for a communication assessment of the student.
Step 2: Recommendation. Receive an official recommendation for a compensatory aid / AAC device, specifying that Isaac AAC is needed for the student's educational participation.
Step 3: Application. The school submits a funding application through the school founder to the relevant regional education authority.
Step 4: Procurement. Upon approval, purchase Isaac AAC — either the app alone or as a tablet bundle with pre-installed software.
Step 5: Training. We provide onboarding training for teachers, teaching assistants, and support staff. Includes practical workshops on integrating AAC into daily classroom routines.
Step 6: Ongoing support. Continuous technical support, vocabulary updates, and consultation for adapting the system as the student's needs evolve.
Collaborative teaming: Successful AAC implementation requires collaboration between classroom teachers, special educators, speech-language therapists, teaching assistants, and families. Isaac AAC makes this easy with shared profiles and progress tracking.
Modeling: Research emphasizes aided modeling — where adults and peers model AAC use alongside speech. When teachers use Isaac AAC to model communication, students learn faster and more naturally.
Consistency: AAC should be available throughout the school day, not only during designated therapy sessions. Studies show that brief one-on-one AAC sessions alone are insufficient — integration into all classroom activities is key.
Peer involvement: Training classmates to interact with the AAC user creates more natural communication opportunities. Peers can learn to wait for responses, use simpler language, and engage positively with AAC output.
Compensatory aid (Kompenzačná pomôcka): Isaac AAC qualifies under category 3.4.3 — Communicators ("rôzne programy na AAK komunikáciu, mechanické a IKT komunikačné pomôcky a prístroje") in the official list of specific compensatory aids. Schools can apply for up to €2,000 per device through the RÚŠS (Regional Office of School Administration) via the school founder.
Legal basis: § 145a ods. 2 písm. p) of Act No. 245/2008 Z.z. (Education Act) — provision of compensatory aids as a support measure.
Requirements: A statement from the CPPPaP (Center for Pedagogical-Psychological Counseling and Prevention) confirming the need for the specific compensatory aid, the CPPPaP's inability to lend the device, and that the device is not financed from other sources (health insurance, social affairs, Digital Equipment for Schools program).
DigiEDU program: Special schools receive a basic ICT package worth €2,500 + an additional €16,000 for inclusive ICT of their own choosing through the Plan of Recovery and Resilience. Isaac AAC tablets can be included in this allocation. Registration at app.digiedu.sk.
Social affairs route: Families with a ŤZP (severe disability) card can also apply for a compensatory aid through the ÚPSVaR (Office of Labor, Social Affairs and Family) — an alternative funding path where the school assists families with the application.
Process: CPPPaP assessment → Official recommendation → School submits application via founder → Founder submits to RÚŠS → MŠVVaM SR approves and allocates funds → School purchases Isaac AAC.
Contact us for ready-made documentation templates, sample CPPPaP recommendation texts, and step-by-step application guides.
Compensatory aid (Kompenzační pomůcka): Isaac AAC can be recognized as a compensatory aid for students with communication needs under Czech education law. Schools work with SPC (Speciálně pedagogické centrum) to document the need and secure funding.
Support measures: The Czech system of support measures (podpůrná opatření) in 5 levels allows schools to request specialized devices for students. AAC devices fall under higher-level support measures with dedicated funding.
Contact us for Czech-specific documentation and guidance.
In Hungary, schools can work with the Pedagógiai Szakszolgálat (Pedagogical Professional Service) to assess communication needs and recommend AAC tools. Isaac AAC supports Hungarian language and can be integrated into the Egyéni Fejlesztési Terv (Individual Development Plan). Contact us for Hungarian-specific funding guidance.
Polish schools can integrate Isaac AAC into the IPET (Indywidualny Program Edukacyjno-Terapeutyczny). The Poradnia Psychologiczno-Pedagogiczna assesses communication needs and can recommend AAC devices. Contact us for documentation in Polish.
In Germany and Austria, AAC falls under Unterstützte Kommunikation (UK). Funding may be available through Eingliederungshilfe, health insurance (Krankenkasse), or school-specific budgets for Förderschulen and Inklusionsschulen. Contact us for region-specific information.
Italian schools can include Isaac AAC in the PEI (Piano Educativo Individualizzato). Italy has strong inclusive education policies, and AAC devices can be funded through ASL (Azienda Sanitaria Locale) or school support budgets. Contact us for Italian documentation.
We provide documentation and support for insurance reimbursement and public funding processes in all countries where we operate. Our team can help navigate your country's specific funding mechanisms for assistive technology in education.
A 2012 Harvard study of 68,000 students with disabilities found that the greater the proportion of the school day spent with non-disabled peers (with appropriate supports like AAC), the higher the math and language outcomes.
Multiple studies confirm that providing effective AAC reduces frustration-based challenging behaviors by 60–70%. When students can express their needs, behavioral incidents decrease significantly.
AAC enables requesting, answering questions, commenting, and social chat — the full range of communicative behaviors needed for classroom social life. Studies show gains generalize across settings and communication partners.
Research from the Bridge School (15-year study) shows that students who receive intensive AAC services successfully transition to inclusive educational settings in their local schools, achieving independence and participation.
High-tech AAC solutions (like tablet-based Isaac AAC) provide dynamic settings, immediate voice output, and intuitive touchscreen interaction. Research shows these tools support both language development and academic engagement.
When the same AAC system is used at home and school, communication skills generalize faster. Isaac AAC's multi-device sync ensures seamless continuity between environments.
Isaac AAC supports Slovak, Czech, Hungarian, Polish, German, Italian, and English — with native text-to-speech voices (male, female, child) in each language. The only AAC with complete Central European localization.
Compared to international AAC solutions like Proloquo2Go (€250), TouchChat (€150), or Tobii Dynavox (€3,000+), Isaac AAC provides comprehensive functionality at a fraction of the cost — making school-wide adoption feasible.
A comprehensive symbol library covering everyday vocabulary, academic subjects, emotions, social phrases, and school-specific terminology. Fully customizable — teachers can add photos, school logos, and subject-specific images.
Isaac AAC works fully offline — no internet connection needed. Essential for schools with limited connectivity, outdoor activities, field trips, and environments where Wi-Fi is restricted.
One-time purchase with no recurring subscription costs. Predictable budgeting for schools — purchase once, use indefinitely.
Ready to use within minutes. Pre-configured vocabulary sets for different age groups and communication levels. Teachers don't need to build boards from scratch.
Initial onboarding (2–3 hours): Hands-on workshop covering Isaac AAC setup, vocabulary management, student profile creation, and integration into daily classroom routines. Available on-site or online.
Advanced training (half-day): Deep dive into AAC strategies — aided modeling, prompt hierarchies (Least-to-Most, Show-and-Wait), data collection for IEP goals, and collaboration with speech-language therapists.
Ongoing support: Video tutorials, email/phone support, and periodic check-in consultations. We help troubleshoot issues and adapt the system as student needs evolve.
Whole-school training: For schools implementing AAC across multiple classrooms, we offer school-wide professional development days covering communication-friendly classroom environments, Universal Design for Learning (UDL) with AAC, and peer training programs.
Before Isaac AAC, Martin communicated only through sounds and facial expressions. After 2 weeks of using the app, he began using basic words. Within 3 months, he was forming complete sentences. He transitioned from home education to attending school — and his behavioral challenges decreased dramatically.
Sofia was non-verbal with frequent frustration-related outbursts. After introducing Isaac AAC, her tantrums decreased by 70%. She began combining words, started developing verbal speech, and her sleep and eating improved as communication reduced her anxiety.
A special primary school in Slovakia equipped 14 tablets with Isaac AAC through DigiEDU funding. Teachers report that students are more engaged in lessons, participate more actively in group work, and social interactions between students have improved noticeably.
Contact us to discuss school licensing, teacher training, implementation support, and funding guidance. We help you every step of the way — from application to classroom integration.
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