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Building a Private Practice Gretchen Wegner Building a Private Practice Gretchen Wegner

Business Building CAN Feel Better for Coaches: No More Ewww!

Finals season is here—and if you're an academic coach who also runs a business, you know how intense this time of year can be. In this behind-the-scenes look at the Rock Your Biz community, we explore what real-life coaching entrepreneurs are talking about: intake calls, tricky client dynamics, ethical marketing, and building a business that actually feels good. If you're craving business support that’s thoughtful, heart-centered, and aligned with how you serve students—this is for you.

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Coaching Student Skills Gretchen Wegner Coaching Student Skills Gretchen Wegner

Inspire 2e Students to Double-Check Their Work

I recently got this email from a mom about how to get her 2e son to double-check his work before he turns it in.

A quick definition, for those who don’t know: “2e” is a shortened form for the phrase “twice exceptional.” This is a descriptor often used for intellectually advanced students, otherwise known as “gifted,” who also have a learning disability such as, but not limited to, dyslexia, ADHD, or autism.

When we hear the phrase 2e, we don’t know exactly what this student’s combination of strengths and challenges is, but we do know that he is both extremely gifted in some cognitive domains and extremely challenged in others.

So what’s the exact question? Let’s hear it in the mom’s own words:

“Hi Gretchen, I am a mother of two neurodivergent children, age 11 & 12, and have truly appreciated your Study Cycle to share with my kids. My daughter has inattentive ADHD and these tools will really help her. 

However, my son is twice exceptional.  He definitely doesn’t need repetition most of the time to retain material and until this year almost received 100% on all of his assignments and tests and scores 99% on standardized tests. 

This year though he is starting to make mistakes.  He will get back his work and be so mad at himself b/c there are “silly mistakes.” We have told him many times to double-check his work, and he says he is.  I’m sure this story doesn’t surprise you in describing a neurodivergent kid. 

Do you have “tools” for teaching students how to best double-check their work so they don’t make mistakes on material they actually know well?”

Oooh. Such a great question that I bet a lot of parents, coaches, tutors, and educators of neurospicy students have. In this article we dig into several action steps to take including: digging deeper into the student’s experience, making a checklist, conducting a mistake analysis, creating a homework and test-taking routine, and, maybe most important, unpacking internalized ableism.

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Coaching Student Skills Gretchen Wegner Coaching Student Skills Gretchen Wegner

Do Working Memory Games Really Work?

Recently I received this email from a school-based teacher who is helping her students prepare for final exams:

“I recently switched jobs, and I teach high school (I used to teach early childhood). I am teaching in small groups and supporting students who have learning disabilities and/or ADD/ADHD etc. 

In your videos, you’ve mentioned the importance of their working memory, and I understand the value of it. However, when I Google to find some activities to practice working memory with high school students, the ideas are too elementary and wouldn’t work in my small group setting. 

Do you have any good ideas/games/activities to help me practice working memory with high school students?”

What a great question!! At first glance, it seems pretty straightforward. There must be fun games to help students practice working memory, right?!

Well… sort of. The answer is more complicated than you think, though. And the best way to reveal this complexity is to narrate blow-by-blow what happened next…

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