Full Course Description


Advanced Assessment of Autism in Children, Teens & Young Adults: Differential Diagnosis, Masking & Internalizing Profiles

Details coming soon!

Copyright : 19/11/2026

Sensory & Interoceptive Foundations for Emotional and Behavioral Regulation Across Development

Why do some children experience panic during transitions, emotional outbursts during daily routines, or rigid behavioral patterns that seem resistant to traditional behavioral approaches? Increasingly, research suggests these challenges may reflect underlying differences in sensory processing, motor development, interoception, and nervous system regulation rather than willful behavior or noncompliance.

This advanced training provides clinicians, educators, and therapists with a neurodevelopmental framework for understanding emotional and behavioral regulation across childhood and adolescence. Participants will explore how sensory processing, movement, body awareness, autonomic nervous system function, and interoceptive development influence emotional resilience, adaptive functioning, participation, and mental health outcomes in autistic and neurodivergent individuals.

Through case examples, practical assessment strategies, and evidence-informed intervention approaches, attendees will learn how to identify regulation challenges before they escalate into behavioral crises and develop individualized sensory, motor, and interoceptive supports that improve participation across home, school, and community settings. Participants will leave with immediately applicable tools for addressing feeding, sleep, hygiene, transitions, emotional regulation, and daily living challenges through a strengths-based, neuroaffirming lens.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Differentiate sensory, motor, and interoceptive contributors to behavioral and emotional dysregulation in autistic and neurodivergent individuals.  
  2. Utilize clinical observation and assessment strategies to identify regulation challenges affecting daily living activities.
  3. Develop individualized intervention plans that incorporate sensory, motor, and interoceptive supports across home, school, and community settings.  

Outline

Understanding Regulation Through a Neurodevelopmental Lens

  • Sensory processing and nervous system development 
  • Interoception and body awareness across childhood 
  • Motor development as a foundation for regulation 
  • Connections between sensation, movement, emotion, and behavior 
  • Autism, ADHD, sensory processing differences, and regulation challenges 

Identifying Sensory, Motor, and Interoceptive Indicators of Dysregulation

  • Sensory contributors to anxiety, panic, rigidity, and distress 
  • Recognizing early signs of nervous system overwhelm 
  • Motor planning and praxis challenges affecting participation 
  • Interoceptive differences influencing emotional awareness 
  • Assessment tools and clinical observation strategies 

Evidence-Informed Intervention Strategies

  • Proprioceptive and movement-based regulation supports 
  • Interoceptive awareness activities and coaching 
  • Sensory modulation strategies for emotional stability 
  • Environmental modifications and sensory-smart routines 
  • Supporting executive functioning through sensory and motor interventions 

Daily Living Applications Across Contexts

  • Feeding and mealtime regulation supports 
  • Hygiene and self-care participation strategies 
  • Sleep routines and nervous system regulation 
  • Transition supports across home, school, and community settings 
  • Collaborative care planning for consistency across environments 

Case Applications and Clinical Integration

  • Case study: Anxiety and sensory overload 
  • Case study: Rigidity and transition challenges 
  • Case study: Interoception and emotional awareness difficulties 
  • Designing individualized regulation plans 
  • Measuring outcomes and adapting interventions 

Limitations of Research and Potential Risks

  • Current strengths and limitations of sensory and interoceptive research 
  • Considerations regarding generalizability of findings 
  • Risks of over-attributing behaviors to sensory factors 
  • Importance of interdisciplinary assessment 
  • Ethical and culturally responsive implementation

Copyright : 19/11/2026

When Autism Support Needs Are High: Tools for Regulation, Communication & Daily Life

For families—and the clinicians who support them—autism with higher support needs can feel overwhelming, isolating, and urgent. 

This session offers practical, nervous‑system‑informed strategies for supporting children, teens, and young adults with autism levels 2 and 3 with a focus on safety, connection, and meaningful daily participation.

  • Co‑regulation anchors for meltdowns, shutdowns, and sensory overwhelm 
  • Visual, structural, and environmental supports for safer daily routines 
  • Connection‑first communication supports for minimally speaking individuals 
  • Functional participation strategies for caregiving, transitions, and community access

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Utilize research related to neurodiversity, communication, social emotional development and sensory systems to develop person affirming, applicable regulation routines.
  2. Utilize visual supports, naturalistic interventions, and child led strategies to engage students/clients in sessions/lessons that support skill development, founded in neuroaffirming practices.
  3. Integrate functional strategies and collaborative planning that allow clients and families to more successfully engage in daily, school, and clinical routines and experiences.

Outline

Connection-first communication supports for minimally speaking individuals

  • Use co-regulation as a prerequisite for communication
  • Shift communication from “performance” to “interaction” and engagement
  • Reduced-demand environments improve engagement for some autistic learners
  • Autonomy-supportive interactions improve engagement

Co-regulation anchors for meltdowns, shutdowns, and sensory overwhelm

  • Use coregulation and counterregulation to support clients’ emotional and sensory needs
  • Identify and implement low arousal and low demand approaches to support skill building opportunities 
  • Honor client/student voice/ experience to develop regulation routines and strategies

Visual, structural, and environmental supports for safer daily routines

  • Identify and implement visual + environmental supports that match individual and environmental need
  • Create environmental supports that lead to increased opportunity and engagement
  • Foster routines that match client need and support progress toward identified areas of growth

Functional participation strategies for caregiving, transitions, and community access

  • Use a whole child lens to collaborate with service providers and families to develop outcomes that align with strengths and identified areas of growth
  • Utilize Utilize Prevent, Teach, Respond to increase engagement and participation within therapy, community, educational and home settings

Limitations of the research and potential risks

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Educators
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Speech Language Pathologists
  • Marriage and Family Therapists 

Copyright : 19/11/2026

Autistic Family and Sibling Dynamics: Fostering Understanding, Balance, and Support

Families often feel isolated, exhausted, and misunderstood as they navigate the autistic family journey—one that can include stigma, pride, confusion, and deep connection. Join us as we share a practical, compassionate framework that brings relief across childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood while supporting healthy identity and well‑being for siblings and parents alike.

  • Co‑regulation strategies families can realistically use
  • Scripts and reframes that reduce shame and blame
  • Sibling stressors, role shifts, and resilience supports
  • Functional routines that decrease conflict and increase predictability

Program Information

Outline

Families often feel isolated, exhausted, and misunderstood as they navigate the autistic family journey—one that can include stigma, pride, confusion, and deep connection. Join us as we share a practical, compassionate framework that brings relief across childhood, adolescence, and young adulthood while supporting healthy identity and well‑being for siblings and parents alike.

  • Co‑regulation strategies families can realistically use
  • Scripts and reframes that reduce shame and blame
  • Sibling stressors, role shifts, and resilience supports
  • Functional routines that decrease conflict and increase predictability

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Educators
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Speech Language Pathologists
  • Marriage and Family Therapists

Copyright : 19/11/2026

Autism, Gender Diversity & Bullying: Protecting Youth in School & Community Spaces

Details coming soon!

Copyright : 19/11/2026

PDA, Autonomy & Nervous-System-Driven Demand Avoidance Across Development: Transforming Combative to Collaborative

Finally understand the child, teen, or young adult who appears to “refuse everything” – creating a powerful shift for families who feel stuck & helpless.

This session reframes demand avoidance as a nervous-system-driven response rooted in anxiety, sensory overload, and self-regulation challenges, offering families and clinicians a respectful, effective path forward.

  • PDA related to anxiety and sensory overload vs oppositional defiance
  • Autonomy-first approaches that reduce nervous-system threat and support self-regulation and emotional safety
  • Flexible-thinking and tolerance-building supports that address perspective mismatch, emotional awareness, and relational regulation
  • Low-pressure environments that promote participation, collaboration, and safety across home, school, and community contexts

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Identify and discern the differences between PDA and ODD.
  2. Utilize technique to identify the function of a PDA behavior and promote awareness of Individualized reinforcements.
  3. Identify the 7 methods of collaborative communication to diffuse PDA behaviors.

Outline

What is PDA and how is it misinterpreted as ODD (limitations of research and potential risks)

  • What are the differences? What are the similarities (Brief symptom review)
    • Mood/Sensory dysregulation
    • Distraction avoidance
    • Social appearance (bossy/controlling)
    • Refusal to access help
    • Rich imaginative play
  • How do we tease these things apart, and how does this inform our interactions?

What are the goals of the PDA individual?

  • Power/Control across the developmental spectrum
  • Anxiety regulation
  • How is this creating a predictable attachment cycle (activity for attachment cycle)

Techniques for a Collaborative environment and diffusing PDA:

  • Minimizing unneeded sensory input (environmental changes) brief discussion
  • Awareness of vocal tone & tempo (Adult communication awareness) brief discussion
  • Preparation of transitions (injecting a pause for expectation) Priming the Pump Activity
  • Use of visual cuing (left/right hemisphere engagement for regulation) brief discussion
  • Flexible thinking and compromise (collaborative communication) brief example
  • Use of indirect language skills (open ended questions/creating creative approaches to task requests) brief example
  • Indirect Praise and successive approximations brief discussion

Activity (Self-Esteem cake-)

  • How do we help kids self-identify need not being met in their environment?
  • How do we give kids a voice for the kinds of non-tangible reinforcements that work just for them?

Questions and Closing

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Educators
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Speech Language Pathologists
  • Marriage and Family Therapists

Copyright : 20/11/2026

Neurodiversity-Affirming Play Therapy for Connection & Regulation

When words aren't accessible and emotions overwhelm, relational experiences become the pathway forward.

  • Interest‑based play and experiential work for co‑regulation and connection
  • Sensory‑motor experiences for emotional and behavioral stability
  • Communication supports naturally embedded in interaction
  • Adaptations for minimally or inconsistently speaking children and teens

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Utilize directive play therapy interventions to help with connection and regulation needs of neurodivergent children.
  2. Summarize special considerations when implementing play therapy approaches with autistic and other neurodivergent children.
Integrate neurodiversity informed and affirming play therapy theory and approach selection and implementation.

Outline

Foundations of Neurodiversity-Affirming Play Therapy

  • Neurodiversity-affirming values and strengths-based perspectives
  • Connection and co-regulation as therapeutic foundations
  • Relational safety through interest-based engagement
  • Therapist attunement, flexibility, and responsiveness

Play-Based Strategies for Connection and Regulation

  • Interest-driven play for relationship-building
  • Sensory-motor experiences supporting regulation and stability
  • Individualizing theory and approach to best fit the child’s neurodivergent spectrum of presentation

Clinical Implementation Across Profiles

  • Individualized approaches across developmental and support needs
  • Integration with caregivers and natural environments
  • Balancing structure and flexibility in sessions
  • Limitations of the research and potential risks

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Educators
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Speech Language Pathologists
  • Marriage and Family Therapists

Copyright : 20/11/2026

Sandtray & Sensory-Expressive Therapies for Minimally Speaking & Highly Distressed Youth

Details coming soon!

Copyright : 20/11/2026

From Compliance to Connection: Tools to Support Joint Engagement

Joint engagement is essential for communication, learning, and social development—but many clinicians have been trained to look for it through a compliance-based lens. Prompts like “look at me,” “show me you’re listening,” or “sit still” can unintentionally create barriers to authentic interaction, especially for autistic children. 

When engagement is defined by outward behaviors instead of internal processing, clinicians may misinterpret a child as “not engaged,” leading to missed opportunities for connection and progress. This seminar will challenge those assumptions and provide a clear, neurodiversity-affirming framework for understanding what engagement truly looks like across different learners.

Imagine being able to recognize engagement in its many forms—and knowing exactly how to respond in the moment to support it. In this highly practical training, you’ll learn concrete, regulation-based strategies to reduce barriers, facilitate joint engagement, and increase meaningful participation in therapy and classroom settings. 

Instead of relying on outdated compliance-driven approaches, you’ll walk away with immediately usable interventions that align with how autistic children actually process and engage. 

The result: more effective sessions, stronger connections, and improved clinical outcomes rooted in authentic engagement rather than performance.

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Differentiate listening as a dynamic learning and joint engagement process from traditional compliance-based expectations, and apply this framework to interpret  participation in clinical, social or educational settings. 
  2. Analyze the role of regulation in supporting listening and engagement, and implement at least two regulation-based strategies to increase participation during therapy or classroom interactions. 
  3. Evaluate the evolution of the Whole Body Listening concept and integrate neurodiversity-affirming adaptations into clinical or educational practice.

Outline

Reframing Listening Through a Joint Engagement Lens

  • Listening vs. compliance: identifying misconceptions that limit engagement 
  • Recognizing internal processing vs. observable “listening behaviors” 
  • Clinical impact of misinterpreting engagement on communication outcome

From Whole Body Listening to Regulation-Based Practice

  • History and limitations of traditional Whole Body Listening models 
  • Neurodiversity-informed shifts toward individualized engagement 
  • Regulation as the foundation for attention, participation, and learning 

Clinical Strategies to Support Engagement Through Regulation

  • Co-regulation techniques to reduce barriers and increase participation 
  • Practical tools: sensory supports, movement, and environmental adjustments 
  • Partnering with educators and caregivers to generalize strategies across settings
  • Limitations of the research and potential risks

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Educators
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Speech Language Pathologists
  • Marriage and Family Therapists

Copyright : 20/11/2026

Collaboration 24/7 to Create Functional and Meaningful Accommodations

Effective accommodations work best when everyone families, educators, and clinicians collaborates across environments to support regulation, participation, and independence. This session emphasizes shared problem‑solving and aligned strategies, so supports are functional, flexible, and meaningful throughout daily life.

  • Neurodiversity‑affirming accommodations across home, school, and community settings
  • Executive function, motor skill, sensory, and interoceptive foundations for daily participation
  • Collaborative IEP processes that translate clinical insight into educational impact
  • Consistency plans aligning routines, supports, and expectations 24/7

Program Information

Objectives

  1. Analyze the flow of a student’s 24-hour day, noticing similarities and differences and applying that information to facilitate access.
  2. Utilize global information to plan for the student’s day, address IEP goals, accommodations and modifications.
  3. Use a specific rubric to create a communication system between home and school that has meaning and application.

Outline

Giving New Meaning to Collaboration 24/7: The Other 18 Hours of the Day

  • The 24-hour clock framework and home–school inquiry tools
  • Strengths-based patterns across home, school, and community settings
  • Environmental contributors to regulation and dysregulation
  • Daily rhythms beyond annual paperwork and compliance-driven data
  • Individualized calming threads across the child’s full day

Global and Individualized Accommodations

  • Universal Tier 1 supports currently available
  • Classroom schedules, transitions, and participation parameters
  • Child-specific regulation needs and access considerations
  • Integration bridges across settings and instructional flow
  • Flexibility points within the broader educational system

Collaborative Implementation Across Systems

  • Purposeful communication among educators, families, and caregivers
  • Alignment across classroom teachers, specialists, and support staff
  • Shared understanding of realistic accommodations
  • Case vignette illustrations of access-focused planning
  • Sustainability considerations for ongoing collaboration
  • Limitations of the research and potential risks

Target Audience

  • Counselors
  • Social Workers
  • Psychologists
  • Educators
  • Occupational Therapists
  • Speech Language Pathologists
  • Marriage and Family Therapists

Copyright : 20/11/2026