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December 9, 2025

Beyond Report Cards: Recognizing Progress in Neurodivergent Children

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Are you constantly measuring your child's worth—and your parenting success—by letter grades and standardized milestones? In this transformative episode of The Parenting Cipher, special education advocate Genie Dawkins reveals why the most meaningful progress often happens in the quiet moments we overlook.

Drawing from personal experiences raising two sons with autism spectrum disorder, Genie explores how cultural expectations of excellence, W.E.B. Du Bois' concept of double consciousness, and grade-focused education systems create unnecessary pressure on both neurodivergent children and their parents.

This episode is essential listening for parents navigating IEPs, managing learning disabilities, supporting children with ADHD or autism, and anyone seeking a more compassionate approach to measuring growth.

A black woman with locs smiling talking to her sons reviewing report card

What You'll Learn in This Episode

Understanding Progress Beyond Grades

  • Why letter grades don't tell the full story of your child's development
  • How to identify meaningful progress in children with learning differences
  • The hidden signs of emotional regulation and self-advocacy skills
  • What teachers may miss when evaluating neurodivergent students

Special Education Insights

  • How to interpret report cards when your child has an IEP
  • Signs that accommodations are (or aren't) working effectively
  • The importance of building a support team beyond school staff
  • Real strategies for IEP meetings that get results

Recognizing Internal Growth

For Your Child:

  • Decreased frequency of anxiety attacks or meltdowns
  • Improved ability to communicate needs ("I need a break," "I don't understand")
  • Shorter recovery times after emotional dysregulation
  • Increased willingness to try challenging tasks
  • Better self-awareness about sensory needs and triggers

For Parents:

  • Setting clear boundaries with school administrators
  • Responding calmly during crisis situations
  • Trusting your instincts about your child's needs
  • Creating predictable routines that reduce stress
  • Asking for help without guilt

The Two Mirrors Framework

Child Mirror: Focus on internal wins

  • Self-regulation improvements
  • Increased self-awareness
  • Willingness to try again after failure
  • Asking for support when needed

Parent Mirror: Acknowledge your progress

  • Calm responses during challenging moments
  • Clear boundary-setting with schools and providers
  • Consistent routines that support your family
  • Intentional reactions vs. automatic responses

Key Moments & Timestamps

[00:00] Introduction: W.E.B. Du Bois and the pressure of double consciousness in Black parenting

[01:46] Genie's personal journey: From dyslexia diagnosis to autism acceptance

[03:24] The cultural pressure for excellence and how it affects neurodivergent families

[06:06] What report card grades really mean (and don't mean) for special education students

[08:09] Recognizing subtle signs of progress: anxiety reduction, improved communication, self-advocacy

[10:01] Why emotional regulation changes happen internally before external behavior shifts

[12:01] How to track meaningful IEP goals beyond academics

[13:33] The power of celebrating small wins with your child

[15:52] Why busy school seasons (holidays, testing periods) require extra check-ins

[18:23] Real story: Navigating elopement behavior and finding the right school placement

[23:09] Understanding elopement in autism: causes, triggers, and effective interventions

[24:12] The parent trap: Seeking external validation for your parenting efforts

[27:00] Practical exercise: Identifying your small wins this week

[28:17] Introduction to the Two Mirrors framework for parents and children

[30:02] The importance of pausing before reacting to challenges

[32:04] Why your emotional regulation directly impacts your child's behavior

[34:13] Song for the Cipher: "We Slow Down the Season" (original composition)

W.E.B Dubois sitting in a classroom with kids in the background.

Understanding Key Concepts

What is Double Consciousness?

W.E.B. Du Bois described double consciousness as the experience of constantly seeing oneself through both personal identity and society's often-prejudiced gaze. For Black families with neurodivergent children, this creates compounded pressure to prove worth through achievement and excellence, making it harder to celebrate incremental progress or accept diagnoses without shame.

What is Elopement in Autism?

Elopement (also called "wandering" or "bolting") refers to when an individual with autism leaves a safe space without permission, often running into potentially dangerous situations. It's typically driven by sensory overload, anxiety, curiosity, or the need to escape overwhelming environments. Genie shares her personal experience with her son's elopement behavior and how understanding the "why" led to effective interventions.

IEP Accommodations That Support Real Progress

Effective IEP goals should measure:

  • Frequency of self-regulation (e.g., "Student will self-regulate 4 out of 5 times when overwhelmed")
  • Duration of tasks (e.g., reading comprehension time decreasing from 45 to 30 minutes)
  • Self-advocacy instances (e.g., asking for breaks, requesting help)
  • Social-emotional milestones (e.g., identifying safe people, communicating needs)

Actionable Strategies for Parents

This Week's Practice: Identify Small Wins

For Your Child:

  1. Are meltdowns or anxiety episodes becoming less frequent?
  2. Is your child communicating needs more clearly?
  3. Are they attempting tasks they previously avoided?
  4. Do they recover faster from disappointments?
  5. Are they asking for help instead of shutting down?

For Yourself:

  1. Did you pause before reacting to a stressful situation?
  2. Did you set a boundary with school staff or family?
  3. Did you take time for self-care, even briefly?
  4. Did you trust your instincts about your child's needs?
  5. Did you celebrate progress without waiting for perfection?

black man with short locs with his eyes closed with his hand over his heart. taking a breathe thinking about his child's report card

The 5-4-3 Breathing Technique

When overwhelmed (child or parent):

  • Breathe in for 5 counts
  • Breathe out for 4 counts
  • Repeat 3 times before responding

This simple practice creates space between stimulus and reaction, allowing for more intentional parenting.

A white woman with long brown hair wearing a blouse and green slacks hugging her daughter with mocha skin toned excited about the report card

Creating Your "Hype Moment" Ritual

Just as you'd excite your child about a trip to the zoo or Ice Capades, create enthusiasm around small victories:

  • "Did you notice it only took you 30 minutes today instead of 45? That's amazing!"
  • "I saw you ask your teacher for help. That took real courage!"
  • "You went to your safe person instead of running. You're learning what you need!"

Powerful Quotes from This Episode

"Sometimes the biggest growth our children make is silent. And sometimes the biggest growth we make as parents goes unnoticed too." — Genie Dawkins

"A letter grade can mean many things. A letter grade can mean that they mastered a concept. A letter grade sometimes can mean that they need more support." — Genie Dawkins

"Give them praise. Tell them, like, I'm so happy... That's acknowledging something they may not even acknowledge." — Genie Dawkins

"Most often if we not all right, our kid is not right. You are the safe space for your child." — Genie Dawkins

"Quiet is our superpower. We slow the season down when the world moves too quickly." — Genie Dawkins


Resources & Further Reading

Special Education Resources

Autism & Neurodevelopmental Support

Understanding Double Consciousness

Connect with The Parenting Cipher


About Your Host: Genie Dawkins

Genie Dawkins is a parent advocate, special education strategist, and host of The Parenting Cipher podcast. With lived experience raising two neurodivergent sons—both on the autism spectrum with different presentations and needs—Genie brings authentic, actionable insights to families navigating IEPs, learning disabilities, and the complex emotions of special education parenting.

Her mission is to empower parents to advocate effectively for their children, recognize their own growth alongside their child's progress, and build communities where neurodivergent families feel supported and celebrated. Through storytelling, practical strategies, and cultural awareness, Genie helps parents move from overwhelm to empowerment—one small win at a time.


Join the Conversation

Have you noticed a small win in your child this week? Share your celebration in the comments below or tag us on social media with #TheParentingCipher

Questions about IEPs, accommodations, or recognizing progress? Leave a comment and Genie may address it in a future episode.

Rate and Review: If this episode resonated with you, please leave a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Your reviews help other parents find the support they need.


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