On-Demand eLearning

On-Demand Courses for Parents, Educators and Clinicians

Two cartoon hands typing on a keyboard. A gold login box is above with a text field. The background is black, conveying a digital theme.
Mother is learning for child

On-demand courses for parents, educators, and clinicians who want thoughtful, neuroaffirming education but need to learn on their own time and terms.They’re designed for people who value flexibility and the ability to come back when something clicks later. Or when your child does that thing again and suddenly you need to rewatch that module RIGHT. NOW.. (We get it. That’s exactly how neurodivergent brains often work.)

The content blends lived experience with clinical knowledge and cultural awareness, so you’re getting both the research and the real-life “here’s what actually happens.” They’re practical and accessible, designed to deepen your understanding of neurodivergence, behavior, regulation, and support in ways you can actually apply—whether you’re parenting, teaching, or working clinically.

Learn when your brain is ready. Pause when you need to process. Come back when you’re ready for more.

On-Demand Course Catalogue

A cartoon child wearing a sari with a bindi on their forehead, sitting at a table with a green surface, thoughtfully touching their chin with one finger while looking at four colored pencils laid out before them.

Writing Affirming IEP Goals

Start here on your journey, with unpacking why some of the previous goals we accepted as 'normal' practice were in fact, harmful.

Parents
Principles
Introductory
Cartoon illustration of a child with brown skin and curly hair, wearing a blue t-shirt and a purple hearing aid, with their chin resting on their hand in a thoughtful pose, in front of a white surface.

Supporting Autistic and ADHDer Students

Dive deeper into understanding Autism and ADHD students in your classroom, and not just the ‘what’s’ of strategies, but the ‘why’s.

Parents
ADHD
Introductory
Illustration of stylized trees resembling brains, each labeled with terms such as Dyslexia, Neurotypical, Autism, and ADHD, set against a bright, cloudy sky and a lush forest floor.

Qualitative Differences between Autism and ADHD

An overview of observational differences between the two and examples of the different 'flavours' of each profile across different developmental domains, such as communication, sensory, emotional and executive functioning.

Parents
ADHD
Introductory
Illustration of a person with dark curly hair embracing a child with reddish curly hair, both smiling.

Meltdown Support

Insert one sentence about this course

Parents
Regulation
Introductory

Values and approach

Sandhya has created a range of resources for easy, accessible information for you. Sometimes, the less time you spend engaging with an item, the less we take the information on and have it truly inform practice, but if you benefit from an easy visual and want the information to marinate away, then this section is for you.