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Neurodiversity & Neuroinclusion Blog
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Flexible Working in 2026 (UK): A Neuro-Inclusive Guide for Employees and Managers
A UK guide to flexible working and neuroinclusion, explaining day-one request rights, reasonable adjustments, and practical manager steps.
Apr 134 min read


How to Choose Neurodiversity Training That Changes Behaviour
A lot of neurodiversity training is well-intentioned and still ineffective. It raises awareness, gives people new language, and then… nothing changes. Meetings stay messy. Priorities stay vague. Adjustments stay inconsistent. Managers stay unsure. If you’re commissioning training, you’re not buying a slideshow. You’re buying behaviour change. This guide is a practical checklist to help you choose training that actually improves day-to-day work—and avoids “awareness theatre”.
Apr 103 min read


Focus & Cognitive Stamina at Work: A Neuroinclusive Guide for Teams and Managers
Most “focus” advice assumes the problem is personal discipline. In reality, focus is heavily shaped by environment and work design: clarity of priorities interruptions and context switching meeting load cognitive load in communication unrealistic timelines and “always on” culture Neurodivergent people often feel the costs first, but everyone benefits when organisations design for cognitive stamina. This post explains what cognitive stamina is, what drains it, and the practica
Apr 33 min read


Documentation That Helps Brains: Templates, Not Tests
Most workplace documents quietly test working memory. We hide decisions inside dense paragraphs, bury actions in polite sign-offs, and use formatting that fights the eye. Neuro-inclusive documentation treats text as assistive technology: it reduces cognitive load, makes intent obvious, and lets people act without decoding. The problem isn’t literacy — it’s load Cognitive load theory is blunt: when extraneous load is high (formatting noise, unclear structure), germane load (th
Mar 233 min read


Neuroinclusion in Social Care: 5 Practical Adjustments That Strengthen Staff Confidence
Neuroinclusion in Social Care: 5 Practical Adjustments That Strengthen Staff Confidence By Jade Bossman-Yankey, Senior People Manager at Log My Care Working in social care is incredibly rewarding, but it’s also one of the most demanding environments to be part of. The pace is fast, the emotional weight is real, and the responsibility is huge. It asks a lot from every person on the team. Before moving into People & Culture, I actually started my career in social care myself,
Mar 164 min read


ADHD at Work: What Managers Get Wrong (and What to Do Instead)
A practical guide to workplace adjustments and neuroinclusive support that helps managers reduce friction and improve employee wellbeing.
Mar 63 min read


ADHD at Work: Support on Need, Not Proof
How to make workplace support more accessible, consistent, and useful for neurodivergent employees without overcomplicating the process.
Mar 24 min read
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