Surviving Meltdowns
Host of Neurodivergent Conversations Podcast and a neuro-affirming coach for mamas raising neurodivergent kids. I share honest, no-fluff support rooted in real life and community, because I’ve been the mama who felt like she was doing this alone.
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5 TIPS FOR ADvocating in school
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If you’re a mama of a neurodivergent child, you’ve probably had that moment where you think: I know my kid needs support… but how do I actually get the school to understand and help? Advocating in school can feel overwhelming, especially when you’re juggling meltdowns, meetings, emails, work, and the emotional weight of “Will they see my child the way I do?”
This post is here to make it simpler. Below are 5 practical, parent-friendly tips for advocating at school for your autistic child, ADHD child, or AuDHD child, with scripts and steps you can use right away.
Practical school advocacy tips for mamas of neurodivergent kids (autism, ADHD, AuDHD). Learn how to ask for support, prepare for SEN/SEND meetings, document needs, and get accommodations in place.
Schools are busy. You shouldn’t have to retell your child’s needs from scratch every term. A one-page snapshot gives teachers and the SENCO/SEN team a quick, clear view of what helps your child succeed.
Include:
Quick script to send with it:
“Hi [Name], I’m attaching a one-page snapshot of what helps [Child] thrive at school. It’s designed to be practical for day-to-day classroom support. Could we make sure this is shared with all key staff working with them?”
SEO keywords naturally hit: school support for autism, ADHD accommodations, neurodivergent child support in school.
One of the best advocacy tools is boring but powerful: documentation. Verbal conversations get forgotten. Written communication creates clarity and makes follow-up easier.
What to do:
Simple follow-up template:
“Thanks for meeting today. Just to confirm what we agreed:
This is especially helpful if you’re requesting SEND support, SEN provision, accommodations, an IEP/504 (US), or an EHCP process (UK), because timelines and evidence matter.
A common school response is: “We’ll keep an eye on it.” You deserve clearer than that. Advocacy works best when you ask for specific, measurable adjustments that remove barriers to learning.
Examples of practical accommodations for neurodivergent kids:
Try this phrase:
“Can we agree on three adjustments we’ll trial for 4 weeks, then review with data and observations?”
That sentence gently moves the conversation from opinions to a plan.
If you’ve ever left a school meeting thinking, Why didn’t I say the important thing?! you’re not alone. Advocacy is hard when you’re emotional, tired, and carrying years of worry.
Before any meeting (SENCO meeting, SEND review, teacher meeting), write your 3-point plan:
Example:
A grounding line if you feel dismissed:
“I’m not asking for special treatment. I’m asking for access to learning and emotional safety.”
Bring notes. Bring examples. It is not rude, it is wise.
Whether you’re seeking additional school support, a formal plan, or specialist involvement, patterns are your best friend. Schools respond faster when they can see consistent needs over time.
What to track (for 2 to 4 weeks):
Keep it simple. A notes app checklist is enough.
Then say:
“I’ve noticed a pattern over the last three weeks. Here’s what we’re seeing at home, and here’s what I think it connects to at school. Can we problem-solve together?”
This keeps you collaborative while still being very clear.
Advocating for your neurodivergent child at school is emotional work. It’s also brave work. And it matters, because your child deserves a learning environment that understands their brain, not one that punishes them for it.
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