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ADHD
Articles here address the intersection between ADHD and literacy, discussing both the academic and executive functioning needs of students with ADHD. Explicit, structured methods paired with practical accommodations, flexible pacing, and routine-based environments are emphasised, alongside strategies for leveraging students’ strengths and mitigating distractibility, impulsivity, and working memory challenges.


Digital Literacy and Neurodiverse Learners: What Recent Research Tells Us
A significant new piece of research published in Frontiers in Education (June 2025) titled “Digital literacy and academic performance: The mediating role of self-efficacy and metacognitive strategies” offers compelling insights into how digital literacy skills influence student achievement. Though not specific to neurodivergent learners, its findings have strong implications for how specialist literacy educators can better tailor digital tools and strategies to meet diverse

Jennifer Kellie
Oct 173 min read


Budget 2025 and the Realities of Neurodivergent Literacy Support: A Critical Perspective
New Zealand’s Budget 2025 promises a transformative boost to learning support, with headlines touting $2.5 billion in education spending over four years and major investments in additional learning needs, teacher aides, early intervention, and specialist provision. At first glance, this seems a watershed moment— more teacher aide hours, expanded early intervention, and increased operational grants for schools. However, a closer reading exposes both strengths and substantive g

Jennifer Kellie
Oct 23 min read


Structured Literacy for Learners with ADHD: Evidence, Impact, and Inclusive Practice
A 2024 article from ADDitude Magazine, “Unlocking Achievement in Students with Dyslexia and ADHD” by Dr Mark Bertin, provides an accessible summary of how structured literacy approaches benefit students with ADHD in addition to those with dyslexia (Bertin, 2024). Article Summary Bertin (2024) explains that learning to read is uniquely challenging for many children with dyslexia and for those with ADHD. Structured literacy—characterised by explicit, systematic, and multisensor

Jennifer Kellie
Sep 222 min read


Beyond the Stereotype
A notable 2025 article, “‘Beyond the Stereotype’: Neurodivergent Students’ Experience and Peer and Teacher Understanding of Neurodiversity in a Mainstream Girls’ School” by Milner, Mohamed, and Happé, explores the lived experiences of neurodivergent students and how schools can better support and understand them (Milner et al., 2025). Article Summary This mixed-methods UK study surveyed and interviewed students and teachers in a mainstream school, focusing on neurodivergent s

Jennifer Kellie
Sep 142 min read


Critical Analysis: The Science of Reading and Inclusive Tutoring
Recent research highlights that the science of reading—structured, evidence-based instruction—can help up to 95% of students achieve literacy success, including those who are neurodivergent. Strong Tier 1 (core) instruction, delivered with fidelity and responsiveness, is foundational. However, the research also cautions that while whole-class scaffolding and structure benefit all learners, neurodivergent students need more: a hybrid model that combines class-wide strategies w

Jennifer Kellie
Jul 181 min read


Structured Literacy and Neurodivergent Learners: What the Latest Research Really Tells Us
Supporting children who struggle with reading, writing, or spelling—especially those who are neurodivergent or learning English as an additional language—can feel overwhelming. With so much new research emerging, it’s important to understand not only what each study says but how these findings fit together to shape effective teaching and tutoring practices. In this post, we’ll explore the key insights from the latest research on structured literacy and neurodiversity, highlig

Jennifer Kellie
Jul 63 min read
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