The Support App for Parents of Children with ADHD or Autism
Thriive helps children grow up feeling understood, not broken.
Everyday support for families navigating ADHD, autism, and other neurodivergent profiles. Track the patterns, find strategies that actually fit, and feel one step ahead on the hard days.
What changes for parents of neurodivergent children
Without Thriive
- Growing up believing they're broken
- Falling behind and never understanding why
- Slipping through the cracks of a system not built for them
- Families feeling helpless watching it happen
With Thriive
- A child who understands how their brain works
- Parents who can advocate with confidence
- Strategies that actually fit, not generic advice
- A family that feels like a team
How Thriive supports parents of children with ADHD and autism
- Pattern Tracker: Log a tough moment in 30 seconds. Thriive surfaces the patterns behind ADHD and autism behaviours, so you can spot the triggers and respond earlier.
- Strategy Library: Real strategies for ADHD and autism, matched to your child's profile. Not generic advice.
- Visual Routine Builder: Step-by-step routines for the moments that usually go sideways. Mornings, bedtime, homework.
- Daily Check-ins: A 30-second mood check that builds a picture of how your child is really doing over time.
- Shareable Reports: Take real evidence to your GP, school, or therapist when it matters.
- The Hive: A community of parents who actually get it.
How Thriive helps parents, and how it helps their children
For parents
Understand your child like never before. Advocate with confidence. Stop feeling like you're figuring it out alone.
For children
Feel seen. Understand how your own brain works. Build a profile that's yours.
Neurodivergent conditions Thriive supports
Parent Guides
Glossary
Daily Challenges
Strategy Categories
Community
Dyslexia in Children: Beyond the Reading Struggle
Dyslexia affects how the brain processes written language. It has nothing to do with intelligence — many dyslexic thinkers are exceptionally bright. Reading, spelling, and writing just take a different path for them.
They're not slow readers. They're brilliant minds taking a different path to the same place.
Common signs to look for
- Reading more slowly than classmates
- Confusing similar-looking letters (b/d, p/q)
- Struggling to sound out unfamiliar words
- Spelling the same word differently each time
- Avoiding reading aloud or doing written work
- Strong verbal skills but weaker written output
What this means day-to-day
Homework involving reading or writing can feel overwhelming. Your child may start to say 'I'm stupid' even though they're not — they just learn differently. School can be tiring because they have to work much harder than peers for the same result. Confidence can take a hit if it's not identified early.
Strengths to celebrate
- Strong visual and spatial thinking
- Creative and innovative problem-solving
- Excellent big-picture thinking
- Often highly empathetic and emotionally aware
- Great storytellers and verbal communicators