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How to Prepare Your Child for Routine Changes

Predictability isn't just a preference for autistic children — it's a neurological need. But life changes. Here's how to help your child navigate transitions without a crisis.

Give Advance Notice

Tell your child about a change as early as possible. For a vacation, start talking about it weeks ahead. For a schedule change, the night before is the minimum.

Use a Visual Schedule

A physical or digital board showing the day's sequence reduces anxiety more than verbal reassurance alone. When something changes, update the board together.

Practice the Change

If a new school year is coming, visit the building during summer. If a new caregiver is starting, have an overlap day. Familiarity with the novel context reduces the novelty.

The "First-Then" Frame

Instead of explaining the whole change, use: "First we're doing X, then we'll do Y." One step at a time.

Acknowledge Feelings Without Fixing

"I know this feels hard. The schedule changed and that's frustrating." Don't rush to the solution — being heard first helps regulation.

The goal isn't to eliminate all disruption. It's to build enough predictability that your child has resources left to handle the disruptions that do happen.

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