Supporting parents of neurodivergent children at work free webinar by Inclusive Change

Supporting Parents At Work

May 07, 20263 min read

Supporting Parents of Neurodivergent Children at Work

Why this is a workplace conversation we can’t ignore

Many organisations are fantastic about talking about wellbeing, flexibility, and inclusion.

But there is one group of employees who are often carrying a significant, and largely unseen, load.

Parents of neurodivergent children.

What this can look like day to day

For many families, life is not predictable.

School attendance may be inconsistent or highly stressful.
Mornings can involve anxiety, overwhelm, or refusal to attend.
Evenings can be spent helping a child recover from a day of masking.

Alongside this, parents are often managing communication with schools, navigating support systems, and trying to advocate for their child.

This is not occasional pressure. For many, it is constant.

Why this matters at work

These experiences do not stay at home. They show up at work in ways that are not always obvious:

  • Changes in communication

  • Difficulty concentrating

  • Needing flexibility at short notice

  • Increased stress or fatigue

From the outside, this can sometimes be misunderstood. What looks like disengagement or inconsistency may actually be someone managing far more than we can see.

The risk for organisations

Without understanding and flexibility, this can lead to:

  • Burnout

  • Sickness absence

  • Presenteeism

  • Employees leaving roles they want to stay in

And often, this happens quietly. People do not always feel able to explain what they are dealing with.

What actually helps

The good news is, support does not need to be complicated. In many cases, it comes down to small, practical changes:

  • Clear and open conversations

  • Flexibility that reflects real life, not just policy

  • Adjustments to workload during more difficult periods

  • Communication that reduces pressure rather than adds to it

Most importantly, it is about manager confidence. Knowing how to respond, without making assumptions or overcomplicating the situation.

Moving from awareness to action

There is growing awareness around neurodiversity. But awareness on its own does not change someone’s day to day experience at work. What makes the difference is what happens in real conversations, in real situations, with real people. That is where organisations can start to retain good people, reduce burnout, and build trust.

Join our free Lunch & Learn

We are running a short, practical session focused on this topic:

Supporting Parents of Neurodivergent Children at Work

Date: 18th May 2026
Time: 12:30pm –1:00 (plus optional 15-minute Q&A)
Location: Online, Zoom (register here for a link to the call)

This session will explore:
  • What parents are often managing behind the scenes

  • How this can show up at work

  • What managers can do differently

  • Simple adjustments that make a real difference

Free webinar supporting parents of neurodivergent children at work Inclusive Change UK

Looking to go further

For organisations who want to take this further, we also offer:

Training sessions for managers and teams
Practical tools and real-life scenarios
Ongoing support and mentoring

Small changes, applied consistently, can make a significant difference to both people and performance.


Final thought

Supporting parents of neurodivergent children is not about doing something extra. It is about understanding what is already happening, and responding in a way that works. Because when people feel understood, they are far more likely to stay, contribute, and perform at their best.

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