Development in ND children š§©
A lot of neurodivergent children donāt follow a straight developmental line. You can have a child who is reading well above their age, solving maths problems quickly⦠...but then struggling to join a game, hold a back-and-forth conversation, or manage the social expectations of their year group. And that gap can become really noticeable around Year 2 (US: 1st Grade, age 6ā7). Not because anything has āgone wrongā⦠but because the environment suddenly asks for more than just knowledge. š It starts asking for: ā independence ā organisation ā flexible thinking ā social awareness ā sustained effort on demand For children with AuDHD and a PDA profile, thatās a very different kind of load. š© So what can happen? A child who can do the work⦠starts to avoid it. A child who understands the lesson⦠doesnāt engage with it. A child who seems āfineā academically⦠begins to fall behind in practice Not because theyāve lost ability ā but because the demands have outpaced their capacity in that moment. You might notice things like: ⢠Your 8-year-old chatting more comfortably with younger children (e.g. Year 1 / US: Kindergarten, age 5ā6) ⢠Struggling with group dynamics their own age handle more easily ⢠Avoiding tasks they can absolutely do at home ⢠Big reactions to everyday expectations ⢠Needing more support with starting, stopping, or shifting tasks That doesnāt mean theyāre ābehind.ā It means their development is spiky. š¦ Think of it like this: Their learning ability might be working at Year 4 or above (US: 3rd Grade, age 8ā9)⦠while their executive functioning is closer to Year 1ā2 (US: Kindergartenā1st Grade)⦠and their nervous system is trying to keep everything balanced in between. Thatās a huge load for a child to carry. So when your child gravitates towards younger children socially? That often isnāt regression. Itās regulation. š§āāļø Younger children tend to: ā place fewer social demands ā be more direct and less complex ā allow more flexibility in play