Talking and understanding
Learn how to improve communication skills, self-advocate, and better understand others. Get tips for talking about learning and thinking differences like ADHD, dyslexia, and dyscalculia. Find conversation starters that can help.
Jump to section:
Key articles
Tips and strategies
Downloads
More resources
Watch
Listen
Read
Get more tips and connect with experts on Wunder. It’s a free community app for parents raising kids with learning and thinking differences, like ADHD and dyslexia.
All articles
- Empathetic sentence starters for teachers
- Teens with ADHD and lying
- Teacher tip: Use animated videos to help your child learn to make inferences
- How having mentors can help kids who learn and think differently
- 6 common myths about nonverbal learning disabilities
- How to help if English language learners are struggling in school
- 5 things not to say to your child about going back to school
- Why do some kids always interrupt people?
- 3 ways I’m trying out Universal Design for Learning at home with my kids
- 10 things for teachers to know about English language learners
- What to say when kids fail a test
- What to do if you notice learning and thinking differences in other people’s kids
- 7 tips for talking to your child’s teacher about sensory processing challenges
- 8 tips for telling family members about your child’s challenges
- How to explain sensory processing challenges to friends and family
- 7 ways to boost your child’s vocabulary
- 5 self-advocacy sentence starters for grade-schoolers with dyscalculia
- What is phonological awareness?
- 5 self-advocacy sentence starters for middle-schoolers with dyslexia
- Conversation tips for kids who struggle with social skills
- ADHD and oversharing
- Classroom accommodations for slow processing speed
- 6 self-advocacy sentence starters for grade-schoolers with DCD
- 5 self-advocacy sentence starters for middle-schoolers with ADHD
- 5 tips for employee communications about disability inclusion
- What is word retrieval (or word finding)?
- Why pediatricians want to know how your child is doing in school
- Teaching with empathy: Why it’s important
- Conversation starters to use with your partner about signs you’re seeing in your child
- 6 phrases to use when asking your professor for support
- ADHD and self-esteem: What to say to your child
- How to talk with your child about signs you’re noticing
- I’m having communication issues at work. What’s going on?
- Talking about work challenges with co-workers is a game-changer. Here’s how to do it.
- Why it’s important to support LGBTQIA+ kids with learning differences
- Back-to-school making you and your child anxious? These strategies can help
- Why kids grieve in unexpected ways
- Trouble with focus: Conversation starters to use with your child’s teacher
- Conversation starters for teachers to use with families
- Math trouble: Conversation starters to use with your child’s teacher
- Reading trouble: Conversation starters to use with your child’s teacher
- Trouble with self-control: Conversation starters to use with your child’s teacher
- 9 tips to ease tough talks with your partner about your child’s challenges
- Conversation starters for pediatricians to use with families whose kids are struggling
- 4 tips to build kids’ empathy during COVID
- How to talk to your child about learning and thinking differences
- How to talk with kids about their sibling’s challenges
- 7 tips for talking to your child’s teacher about ADHD
- How to get your child to talk about school
- Building positive relationships with students: What brain science says
- What is social communication disorder?
- Trouble making conversation: Why it happens
- Social and emotional trouble in school: 7 things to ask your child’s teachers
- Speech therapy: What it is and how it helps with language challenges
- Behavior challenges: Conversation starters to use with your child’s teacher
- Writing trouble: Conversation starters to use with your child’s teacher
- 5 conversation starters for discussing an evaluation report with teachers
- 5 conversation starters for discussing supports and services with teachers
- 8 tips for talking to your child’s teacher about dyslexia
- What “I’m not a math person” means to me
- 5 self-advocacy sentence starters for grade-schoolers with dyslexia
- 5 ways a child’s issues can impact a relationship
- What to say to your child about trouble with focus
- What is auditory processing disorder?
- Classroom accommodations for auditory processing disorder
- How speech-language pathologists work with kids
- 7 secret fears about dyslexia
- 5 self-advocacy sentence starters for middle-schoolers with DCD
- 6 ways kids use flexible thinking to learn
- How to help your child learn to read facial expressions
- How to help your child notice voice pitch and tone
- How to help your child understand body language
- 6 self-advocacy sentence starters for grade-schoolers with ADHD
- The importance of showing empathy to kids who learn and think differently
- 5 things not to say to your child about dysgraphia
- 9 important terms to know for school visits
- 10 ways to improve your middle-schooler’s communication skills
- Assistive technology for auditory processing challenges
- Anxiety and slow processing speed
- How to help tweens and teens talk with friends about challenges
- Crucial conversations: Collaboration with families and educators
- 7 ways to communicate with your child without yelling
- 10 ways to improve your grade-schooler’s communication skills
- 4 tips to help Spanish-speaking families communicate with teachers
- 6 ways talking about your child’s challenges can help
- How to show empathy to your students with compassionate curiosity
- How to talk to your child about slow processing speed
- Conversation starters to use with your child’s teachers
- Video: What to do when you and your child don’t “get” each other
- 10 ways to improve your high-schooler’s communication skills
- Perspectives: Talking with kids about racial injustice
- Printable: Help families prepare for parent-teacher conferences
- Questionnaires for connecting with students and families
- Download: Parent-teacher conference surveys
- Video: The emotional journey of one family with many learning and thinking differences
- Self-advocacy sentence starters for kids who learn and think differently
- How to say it: Helping your teen manage 6 common fears about the future
- Perspectives: How to make sure families of color are heard by the school
- 5 self-advocacy sentence starters for middle-schoolers with dyscalculia
- Download: Feelings wheel
- My 5 tips for talking with doctors about learning and thinking differences
- Why some kids talk nonstop
- Why kids have trouble finding the right word to say
- Why some kids don’t listen
Copyright © 2014-2024 Understood For All Inc.