『Why Your Neurodivergent Students Are Disappearing with Vanessa Castañeda Gill』のカバーアート

Why Your Neurodivergent Students Are Disappearing with Vanessa Castañeda Gill

Why Your Neurodivergent Students Are Disappearing with Vanessa Castañeda Gill

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She spent six years hiding her autism diagnosis from everyone — peers, friends, even herself. Then she built a neuroscience-backed video game that's changing how neurodivergent students understand who they are. Vanessa Castañeda Gill the founder of Social Cipher, an SEL video game platform designed by and for neurodivergent people, developed in partnership with the LEGO Foundation. Her work sits at the intersection of neuroscience research and lived autistic experience — and she's one of the few people in edtech who has both. She was diagnosed autistic at 14, went on to become a published neuroscience researcher, and turned her personal story into a scalable tool now reaching classrooms across the country. 80% of school avoidance students are neurodivergent. That single stat reframes every conversation you've been having about "disengaged" kids in your building. Your neurodivergent students aren't checking out because they don't care — they're burning out from performing normalcy in a system that was never designed for how their brains actually work. This episode is a practical roadmap for principals who want to close the gap between their inclusion vision and what neurodivergent students are actually experiencing every single day. 🤩 What You'll Learn Why calm corners and flexible seating aren't enough — and what neurodivergent students actually need to feel safe and stay enrolled.How Social Cipher uses video game mechanics to build a shared emotional vocabulary between students and teachers.What it looks like to lead a majority neurodivergent team — and why that's a strength, not a challenge.Three low-cost, high-impact classroom moves any teacher can make this week to support neurodivergent learners.The principle of "diagnosing a need over needing a diagnosis" — and why it matters for the undiagnosed kids already in your building. 🔨 Breaking Down the Old Rules 🧠 Key Insight #1: Neurodivergent Students Aren't Disengaged — They're Exhausted from Masking What's broken: Schools interpret quiet compliance as success, missing that neurodivergent students spend the entire school day suppressing their natural responses to fit in — and completely collapse when they get home.The shift: Recognizing masking as a coping mechanism, not good behavior, and designing school environments where self-regulation is taught explicitly and practiced safely before students hit their limit.Impact: When schools build in structured regulation opportunities for all students — not just flagged kids — neurodivergent students stop burning out by dismissal and school avoidance rates drop. 🧰 Key Insight #2: SEL Programs Built for Neurotypical Kids Are Leaving Neurodivergent Kids Behind What's broken: Most SEL programs were designed with neurotypical students in mind — and when a neurodivergent student's natural coping tools (stimming, special interests, movement) aren't built into the framework, those tools get labeled as problems instead of recognized as regulation strategies.The shift: SEL curriculum designed by neurodivergent people, grounded in neuroscience, that treats stimming and special interests as assets and builds a shared emotional vocabulary students can actually use in the moment.Impact: Teachers report students using in-game language to communicate their needs in real time — "I feel like Ava right now, I need to go to my quiet space" — which means fewer outbursts, fewer evacuations, and a classroom that's actually safer for everyone. 🧰 Key Insight #3: Diagnose the Need Before You Wait for the Label What's broken: Schools gatekeep neurodivergent supports behind official diagnoses, leaving a massive population of undiagnosed students — disproportionately students of color, girls, and late-identified learners — without the tools they need.The shift: Design your building to meet underlying needs regardless of whether a formal diagnosis exists, because the underlying needs are real whether or not the paperwork has arrived.Impact: Every student who needs movement breaks, predictable routines, or permission to engage through special interests gets those things — and the students who were flying under the radar stop disappearing. 🎙️ VANESSA CASTAÑEDA GILL QUOTES FROM THE RUCKUSCAST "Neurodivergence doesn't need fixing. Your approach does." — Vanessa Castaneda Gill "The world won't work without all kinds of minds." — Vanessa Castaneda Gill "It is part of my identity and part of who I am. It is not all of who I am, and it's not something that needs to be fixed." — Vanessa Castaneda Gill "If you are in a position of leadership, model that vulnerability. It will just allow for so much more vulnerability between your employees or your students and you." — Vanessa Castaneda Gill "It's really hard to tell nuanced and rich and resonant stories that kids can actually root for and feel represented by if it wasn't led by neurodivergent experience." — Vanessa ...
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