"Back-to-School Blueprint: Mapping 5 Supports Your Neurodivergent Teen Needs to Thrive" 

1. The Low-Demand Morning Routine (The Launchpad)

The transition from summer to early school mornings is a massive drain on executive function. Scaffolding this means removing as many decisions and demands from the morning as possible.

  • What it looks like: Setting up a highly predictable, visual flow. This might mean laying out clothes the night before, having "grab-and-go" safe foods ready, and using visual timers rather than constant verbal reminders (which can feel like nagging and trigger anxiety).

  • The Goal: Getting them out the door with their "social battery" as full as possible, rather than depleting it before they even get on the bus.

2. A Pre-Arranged "Escape Hatch" (Sensory & Emotional Regulation)

High schools are loud, chaotic, and heavily demanding. A neurodivergent teen needs to know exactly what to do when they hit sensory or emotional overload before they reach a meltdown.

  • What it looks like: Collaborating with the school (via IEP, 504, or informal agreement) to establish a safe, quiet space they can retreat to—like the library or a counselor's office. Just as importantly, they need a discrete "signal" or a laminated hall pass so they can leave a room without having to publicly explain themselves to a teacher.

  • The Goal: Giving the teen autonomy and a physical safety net when the environment becomes too intense.

3. The "Safe Anchor" Adult

Navigating multiple teachers with different personalities and rules is exhausting. Scaffolding a teen’s social-emotional landscape requires finding one person in the building who truly gets them.

  • What it looks like: Identifying a case manager, a favorite teacher, a school psychologist, or a librarian who serves as their "anchor." This is the person the teen knows they can go to if they lose their schedule, feel overwhelmed by peer drama, or simply need to decompress.

  • The Goal: Ensuring the teen never feels entirely alone or misunderstood in a massive school building.

4. Energy-Based Task Mapping (Executive Function Support)

Traditional planners often fail neurodivergent teens because they only track deadlines, not the energy required to do the task. Scaffolding their workload means helping them visualize their week differently.

  • What it looks like: Working with them on Sunday evenings to map out the week, breaking massive, vague projects into tiny, actionable steps. More importantly, it means scheduling the hardest tasks for when they actually have the bandwidth, and planning for deliberate downtime.

  • The Goal: Preventing the "mountains of missing assignments" bottleneck by externalizing their working memory onto a visual, neuro-friendly system.

5. The After-School "Landing Zone" (Restraint Collapse Buffer)

Many neurodivergent teens hold it together all day at school (masking) and then completely melt down the moment they get home. Parents often mistakenly try to ask about their day or push homework during this fragile window.

  • What it looks like: Scaffolding this transition by implementing a strict "zero-demand" policy for the first hour after school. No questions, no chores, no homework. Just a dark room, video games, a snack, or whatever special interest helps their nervous system regulate.

  • The Goal: Honoring their neurological exhaustion and giving them the space to decompress before tackling the rest of the evening.

A Free 3-Session Online Series to Equip Yourself with Actionable Parenting Tools, De-Escalation Scripts, and Executive Functioning Strategies

Improve summer routines, sleep and screen time for your neurodivergent teen or young adult.

Summer can bring later bedtimes, increased screen time, and disrupted routines—especially for teens with ADHD, autism, and other neurodivergent profiles. These changes can lead to more stress, power struggles, and uncertainty for parents.

In this session, you'll learn why sleep patterns, screen use, and daily routines often shift during the summer months and how to create structure that supports your teen's independence and well-being.

You'll leave with practical strategies for reducing conflict, strengthening connection, and building summer routines that work for your whole family.

Join us on June 17, 2026. Click here to register.

Learn more about Session 1.

#1 Summer Reset

#2 The Academic Launch Plan

During the summer, build the executive function tools that prepare your child for academic success.

Many parents of teens with ADHD and other neurodivergent profiles struggle to find the right balance between providing support and encouraging independence.

In this session, learn how to use the summer for an executive function reset. We'll explore how executive functioning skills—such as organization, planning, time management, and follow-through—develop during adolescence and why many teens need additional support in these areas.

You'll learn practical strategies to reduce constant reminders, build responsibility, and help your teen take greater ownership of school, daily tasks, and long-term goals while developing the skills they need for future success.

Join us on July 15, 2026. Click here to register. 

Help your neurodivergent teen or young adult thrive at the start of the school year and achieve academic, social, and emotional success.

As the school year gets underway, many families begin to see patterns emerge—academic struggles, social challenges, increased stress, or growing conflict at home.

For teens and young adults with ADHD and other neurodivergent profiles, these early weeks can provide important insight into what's working and where additional support may be needed.

In this session, you'll learn how to recognize signs that your teen may be struggling with academic demands, social expectations, executive functioning challenges, or emotional stress.

We'll discuss practical strategies for making effective adjustments at home and school, strengthening family communication, and helping your teen better align with the expectations of a neurotypical academic environment.

You'll leave with a framework for reducing family conflict, supporting independence, and improving academic, social, and emotional outcomes throughout the school year.

Join us on August 19, 2026, Click here to register.

Learn more about Session 3.

#3 The First Six Weeks

Register for 1 Session, Get All 3!

July 15, 2026 Online 6:30pm-8:00pm EST Session 2 The Academic Launch Plan: A Closer Look

Click Here to Register