/* FIX 25 START */ /* FIX 25 END */ /* FIX 26 START */ /* FIX 26 END */ /* FIX 27 START */ /* FIX 27 END */
About Neurodiversity

About Neurodiversity

Neurodiversity. Neurodivergent. Neurotypical. What do these actually mean? Let’s make it simple.

Neurodiversity

The natural diversity of human brains.

Neurodiverse

Describes a group that includes many different kinds of brains.

Neurodivergent

A person whose brain works differently from the typical pattern.

What Is Neurodiversity?

Neurodiversity recognises and embraces the natural variations between all human brains and how they function.

Different brains are part of being human. Not wrong. Not broken. Different.

Different ways of thinking are not defects. They are differences. Neurodivergence refers to ways of being that differ from what society labels as “typical.” It is an umbrella term that includes a range of diagnoses and identities.

What Fits Under the Neurodivergence Umbrella?

Examples can include:

ADHD

Differences in planning, focus and task completion

Autism

Differences in communication, processing and sensory experience

Dyslexia

Difficulties decoding and composing written text

Dyscalculia

Challenges understanding number concepts

Dyspraxia

Difficulties planning and coordinating movement

Tourette Syndrome

Involuntary sounds or movements (tics)

OCD

Intrusive thoughts and repetitive behaviours

Bipolar Disorder

Significant shifts in mood and energy

Down Syndrome

A genetic difference affecting development

High Potential & Gifted

Including twice-exceptional (2e)

(There are others — this is not a complete list.)

Many neurodivergent identities occur together

It’s common for someone to:

Have more than one diagnosis Experience traits without a formal diagnosis

Brains are complex. Labels don’t always tell the whole story.

Neurodiversity encourages us to move...

Deficit thinkingDifference thinking
FixingAffirming

Support needs. Celebrate strengths. Both can exist at the same time.