Tag: education

  • Low Pressure Homeschool Activities for ADHD Kids on the Hard Days

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    If you’re homeschooling a neurodivergent child, you already know that there are some days that just don’t go as planned. Maybe your child woke up overwhelmed. Maybe the night before was full of restless sleep. Either way, you know before breakfast it isn’t going to be a typical homeschool day.

    In our home, we’ve learned that pushing through those hard days doesn’t work. Instead, we shift into what I like to call low pressure learning days. The goal isn’t to get a perfect day of learning completed. The goal is to protect our child’s regulation while keeping learning enjoyable and realistic.

    Here’s what low pressure learning looks like in my house.

    • Sensory art time (paid link)
    • Play-Doh or sensory bins (paid link). You can even use sensory bins for connected play, sneaking in some language or speech work. My daughter loves elaborate play scenarios. Those scenes get her talking the most, and it’s a perfect time to naturally evaluate and work on her language and speech errors. When she says phrases like “He goed to the store” I reply “oh! he went to the store?” Model what you want your child to hear, but in a playful way instead of correcting.
    • Water play (paid link) is one of our favorite re-set activities. In the summer we’ll head outside with the water table, but in the winter I’ll even put it in the shower so we can still enjoy it without freezing. For letter sounds and spelling try adding in some foam alphabet letters (paid link).
    • Easy worksheets of mastered topics for review
    • Educational shows with parental engagement (Magic School Bus, Alphablocks)
    • Yoto Stories (paid link)
    • Field trip to get out of the house
    • Outdoor movement
    • Math or phonics hopscotch
    • Gardening and discussions

    For neurodivergent children, regulation comes first. I have found when my daughter feels overwhelmed, her brain is not ready for structured learning. Instead, we focus on regulation, connection, and gentle engagement. Learning happens in a more natural way. 

    Some days are just hard harder for neurodivergent kids and that’s perfectly okay. A successful homeschool day doesn’t mean you push through each subject. For our family a day where we learn and don’t spiral into stress is the ultimate win and is the most sustainable learning path.