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Supporting a Child Who Masks: Parent Guide

 Avoid Questions About the Day

Asking “How was school?” or “What did you do today?” can increase anxiety.

Focus on observing, listening gently and offering choices instead.

 Attend Workshops & Courses

Attend school or external workshops on emotional regulation, masking and neurodiversity.

Learning more equips you to respond calmly and supportively.

Structured Routines

Create consistent daily routines from morning to evening.

Include all activities: meals, hygiene, independent play, homework, evening wind-down.

Use visual timetables to make the day predictable.

Remove completed activities from the schedule to give a sense of control and achievement.

Visual Supports & Communication Boards

Use consistent colours: one for directions, one for choices.

Show simple images for each activity.

Keep images clean: white background, no distractions.

Place at child’s height for independence.

Let the child choose or handle images for comfort and autonomy.

 Safe, Independent Activities

Encourage activities your child can do alone or quietly:

Counting, drawing, building, puzzles

Running, skipping, movement

Focus on activity and engagement, not discussion about the day.

 Observe & Respond to Stress

Recognise outbursts, tears, or withdrawal as normal stress responses.

Provide a calm, predictable environment to help your child regulate emotions.

At school, we use zones of regulation

Validate feelings without judgment:

“I can see this is hard for you.”

“It’s okay to feel frustrated or tired.”

Offer multiple ways to communicate: talking, writing, drawing.

 Supporting Your Masking Child Emotionally

Children need acceptance, predictability, and understanding.

Remind them:

It’s okay to be themselves.

It’s okay to ask for help.

They are not alone.

Your child’s masking is not their fault—home should be a safe place to recharge.


Supporting a masking child takes patience, understanding, and consistency. Using structured routines, visual supports, safe independent activities, and gentle emotional guidance can reduce stress and help your child feel secure and understood.

Learn to love, love to learn

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