Autism, IEPs, and 504 Plans: A Parent’s Guide to School Support
After an autism diagnosis, one of the biggest questions parents face is: what do we do about school now?
In this episode of Beneath the Behavior, Dr. Mark Bowers helps parents understand why school can be so overwhelming for autistic children, even when they are academically capable or appear to be “doing fine” in the classroom. School is not just academics. It is sensory input, transitions, social expectations, executive functioning, communication demands, behavior expectations, masking, and nervous system regulation all happening at once.
This episode breaks down how autism can affect the school experience, why masking often hides a child’s distress, and why meltdowns, shutdowns, school refusal, anxiety, exhaustion, and after-school crashes may be signs of overload rather than defiance.
Dr. Bowers explains what school accommodations are actually for, how to think about IEPs and 504 plans, and why strong grades do not always mean a child does not need support. You’ll learn how to communicate with teachers and school teams more clearly, advocate without immediately becoming combative, and shift the conversation from “my child is difficult” to “my child is struggling under certain conditions.”
The episode also covers sensory accommodations, movement breaks, visual supports, extended time, modified testing environments, autism-related burnout, school refusal, and what real progress can look like for neurodivergent children.
If you are parenting an autistic child and trying to navigate school, special education, accommodations, advocacy, or school-related anxiety, this episode will help you look beneath the behavior and focus on access, regulation, emotional safety, and sustainable learning.
Let Us Know What You Think! [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2567695/fan_mail/new]
Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2567695/support]
Beneath the Behavior is an educational podcast for parents and caregivers of neurodivergent kids.
The information shared is not therapy or a substitute for working with your own provider. Episodes are intended to offer understanding, context, and language—not individual advice.
If you’re looking for ongoing support grounded in the same science-not-shame approach, check out the Neurodivergent Parenting Collective [https://www.drmarkbowers.org/neurodivergent-parenting-collective].