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Great and very useful
This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars
AOD not ADHD
ADHD is widely misunderstood by Neuro Typical members of the public and practitioners. The name itself is the heart of the problem. It's NOT an attention 'deficit'. If this was the case, no-one with ADHD would be able to focus/hyperfocus and excel in certain tasks that they undertake which they are passionate about. The name needs changing to AOD!. It's an attention 'overload' disorder, where 'too many windows are open at the same time'. Either externally (people talking in the background, dogs barking, machinery ect. Or internally, in the form of unwanted/intrusive thoughts, or the mind racing. When the mind quietens, and no external distractions are present, concentration and focus is easily accessed when the subject matter is of great interest.
Very complete training
I learned a lot more than I already knew about neurodiversity, and it will stand me in good stead for working or socialising with anyone who is suffering from the ignorance of others.
Very interesting enjoyed doing the test
Excellent
Very interesting enjoyed doing the test
Excellent
This is a very entry level course regarding neurodivergence
It was a good introduction to Neurodivergence.
Very interesting and informative
The pace of the delivery was excellent. The tone and pitch of the presenter was excellent. The contents and information was excellent. The colour of the white wording on the black background, on the question section, was not very supportive to my neurodivergent brain and therefore I had to re read the questions, several times, before my neurodivergent brain could fully understand the question 🙁
Effective and simple to digest
This user gave this course a rating of 5/5 stars
Nothing new. Underestimates the problems some people have to live a normal life.
This user gave this course a rating of 2/5 stars
Too long
Covers too much in one session