• 148: From Home to School: Bridging Health, Neurodivergence, and Advocacy with Dr. Karin Varblow
    54 m
  • 147: From Medical Reports to Everyday Support — with Dr. Jennifer Linton Reesman, PhD, ABPP
    Oct 7 2025
    Feeling overwhelmed by neuropsychological evaluations, audiology reports, or conflicting advice from doctors and schools?

    In this empowering episode, Dr. Jennifer Linton Reesman—board-certified clinical and pediatric neuropsychologist and Director of Neuropsychology Training at The Chesapeake Center—shares how families can translate complex medical findings into practical, everyday strategies. Learn how to bridge the gap between health and education systems, strengthen collaboration with school teams, and center your child’s unique voice, including for D/HH learners and families using ASL. Calm, doable steps for parents of neurodivergent children—without the burnout.

    Three Key Takeaways
    1. Start small: Begin with the report’s summary or recommendations and choose one to three priorities to focus on.
    2. Bridge the silos: Identify a single point person—at school or in the clinic—so communication flows and teams truly share information.
    3. Trust, then verify: Keep a simple home log of dates and notes to see what’s actually working for your child.
    Listeners: Connect with me, Wendy Taylor
    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/learningessentials/
    • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wendy‑taylor‑7106b6a6/
    • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TutoringLE
    • Website & Course: www.LearningEssentialsEDU.com | Cracking the Code: https://learningessentialsedu.com/course/
    Más Menos
    58 m
  • 146: Transforming Observations into Action: Crafting Effective IEP Goals
    Sep 30 2025
    In this episode of The Special Ed Strategist, host Wendy Taylor is joined by Dr. Rebecca Fritsch, Psy.D., licensed clinical and school psychologist, to explore how parents can document their child’s strengths and challenges at home—and translate those insights into measurable IEP goals. Parents will learn how to connect observations to “educational impact,” collaborate with school teams, and empower their child’s voice in the IEP process.

    Key Takeaways
    1. Document home observations using the simple frame: “When __ happens, my child __, which affects __.”
    2. Focus on educational impact: how behaviors affect learning and participation.
    3. Collaboration + student voice = stronger, more personalized IEP goals.
    Listen & Subscribe
    Apple Podcasts: The Special Ed Strategist

    Listeners: Connect with me, Wendy Taylor
    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/learningessentials/
    • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wendy‑taylor‑7106b6a6/
    • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TutoringLE
    • Website & Course: www.LearningEssentialsEDU.com | Cracking the Code: https://learningessentialsedu.com/course/
    Más Menos
    45 m
  • 145: Medical Insights That Transform Learning & Behavior
    Sep 23 2025
    Feeling overwhelmed by constant IEP meetings, doctor visits, and behavior struggles? Join Wendy Taylor as she interviews developmental-behavioral pediatrician Dr. Amir Miodovnik—an expert who trained at Boston Children’s and Kennedy Krieger—on how medical factors like sleep, anxiety, and ADHD shape learning and behavior. Discover how to transform your observations into action: translate clinical insights into school strategies, prioritize child-centered supports, and plan ahead as your child grows. Warm, clear, and deeply empowering—this episode gives you a strategy you can use immediately.

    Three Key Takeaways
    • Sleep first: Establish sleep routines before tackling attention or emotional issues.
    • One-page strategy: Create a “Student Health Snapshot” to share medical insights clearly with your school team.
    • Expect change: Be vigilant through transitions—behaviors evolve, so adapt supports accordingly.
    About Dr. Amir Miodovnik
    Board-certified developmental-behavioral pediatrician, Dr. Miodovnik trained at Boston Children’s Hospital and Harvard, led developmental medicine at Kennedy Krieger Institute, and now offers private, family-centered care in the DMV area—prioritizing clarity, shorter wait times, and tangible tools for advocacy. Learn more at drmio.com

    Connect with Wendy
    Specialized Tutoring/Coaching: Expert help with Dyslexia intervention, strategic writing, and executive function.
    IEP Course: Learn how to get IEPs with our Cracking the Code course.
    Instagram
    LinkedIn
    Facebook
    Más Menos
    58 m
  • 144: Different Thinkers: Turning a Diagnosis into Empowerment
    Sep 16 2025
    In this episode of The Special Ed Strategist, host Wendy Taylor sits down with pediatric neuropsychologists Dr. Yael Rothman and Dr. Katia Fredriksen—co-authors of the Different Thinkers children’s book series—to explore how families can help children understand diagnoses with compassion and clarity. With a strengths-based, neurodiversity-affirming lens, they offer practical ways to shift conversations from “what’s wrong” to “what’s unique,” empowering both home life and school advocacy.

    Three Key Takeaways:
    • Reframe diagnosis as a narrative shift toward understanding, not limitation.
    • Use personalized storytelling and concrete examples to highlight what the child does best.
    • Equip children with words and self‑advocacy tools early and revisit them as they grow.
    Listeners: Connect with me, Wendy Taylor
    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/learningessentials/
    • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wendy‑taylor‑7106b6a6/
    • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TutoringLE
    • Website & Course: www.LearningEssentialsEDU.com | Cracking the Code: https://learningessentialsedu.com/course/
    Find the full episode here:
    • Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the‑special‑ed‑strategist‑podcast‑with‑wendy‑taylor‑m‑ed‑et‑p/id1639953041
    Other platforms: https://pod.link/1639953041
    Más Menos
    50 m
  • 143: Building Independence One Microstep at a Time
    Sep 9 2025
    In this episode of The Special Ed Strategist, Wendy Taylor sits down with Kristin Lombardi, MA, BCBA, founder of Zeal Behavior Analysis, and Dr. Christine Drew, BCBA-D, Assistant Professor at Auburn University, to discuss their groundbreaking book, Spectrum of Independence: How to Teach Your Neurodiverse Child Daily Life Skills.

    Kristin and Christine share practical, science-backed strategies for helping neurodiverse children gain independence—one “microstep” at a time. From scaffolding skills at home to collaborating with IEP teams at school, this conversation empowers parents to reduce overwhelm, celebrate small wins, and build confidence for both kids and families.

    Three Key Takeaways:
    1. Small Steps, Big Wins: Break routines into microsteps to build confidence and independence without overwhelm.
    2. Home-to-School Bridge: Align daily routines at home with IEP goals to support skills that are relevant across settings.
    3. Progress Over Perfection: Independence looks messy sometimes—celebrate the small victories along the way.
    Connect with Wendy (Host):
    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/learningessentials/
    • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wendy‑taylor‑7106b6a6/
    • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TutoringLE
    • Website & Courses: www.LearningEssentialsEDU.com | Cracking the Code: https://learningessentialsedu.com/course/
    Connect with the Guests:
    Spectrum of Independence website: https://www.spectrumofindependence.com/
    Más Menos
    1 h y 4 m
  • 142: How Will the General Education Teacher Know What’s in My Child’s IEP?
    Aug 12 2025
    In this solo episode of The Special Ed Strategist, Wendy Taylor, M.Ed., ET/P, unpacks a question many parents whisper with concern: How will the general education teacher know—and follow—my child’s IEP?

    Discover what the law requires, what often happens in practice, and proactive ways you can bridge the gap between the IEP document and daily classroom implementation.

    3 Key Takeaways
    • Ask the right questions: Clarify how general education teachers are updated after an IEP is finalized.
    • Share a one-page student snapshot: Highlight strengths, needs, and preferred strategies in a friendly, visual format.
    • Foster ongoing collaboration: Keep communication open, start with gratitude, and track patterns at home to share with the team.
    Contact Wendy
    Website: LearningEssentialsEDU.com
    Instagram: @learningessentials
    LinkedIn: Wendy Taylor
    Facebook: TutoringLE

    Explore the Course
    Cracking the Code to Special Education Eligibility – Learn the 4 Es and unlock services your child deserves: Click here
    Más Menos
    9 m
  • 141: Listener Favorite: Complex Kids: Navigating Autism, ADHD & Anxiety with Dr. Dan Shapiro
    Aug 5 2025
    Understanding your child's unique behaviors can feel overwhelming—but clarity is possible. In this empowering, listener-favorite episode from our archives, host Wendy Taylor welcomes Dr. Dan Shapiro, renowned developmental-behavioral pediatrician, author, and founder of the Parent Child Journey. Dr. Shapiro demystifies the complexities of autism, ADHD, and anxiety by explaining how these conditions interact and providing practical strategies tailored to your child's everyday needs.

    Three Essential Takeaways:
    • Discover how autism, ADHD, and anxiety can coexist and fluctuate, explained through Dr. Shapiro's accessible "brakes too tight vs. brakes too loose" analogy.
    • Learn why functional assessments that track specific daily triggers and behaviors are more insightful than a diagnosis alone.
    • Get practical guidance on medication, therapy, and educational interventions, focusing on prioritizing realistic, achievable goals—small wins over sweeping changes.
    Connect with Wendy Taylor (Learning Essentials):
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • Website
    • Cracking the Code Course
    Connect with Dr. Dan Shapiro:
    Parent Child Journey Website

    A compassionate and informative conversation for any parent feeling uncertain about supporting their child's complex developmental needs.
    Más Menos
    53 m