Beacon College's "A World of Difference: Embracing Neurodiversity" The Podcast

A World of Difference

"A World of Difference" celebrates and supports families who are navigating the journey of learning differences. The show is produced by Beacon College (America's first accredited baccalaureate institution dedicated to educating students who learn differently). Episodes examine neurodiversity issues related to learning disabilities, ADHD, dyslexia, autistic spectrum disorders, and learning differences from birth through the baccalaureate years through compelling storytelling, conversations with experts, viewer Q&As, and interviews with successful/famous individuals with learning differences.

  1. Jun 13

    A World of Difference: Embracing Neurodiversity | Cultivating Emotional Intelligence | S6E10

    In the world of rock music, “You just don’t get it” is a well‑worn refrain — a primal scream of frustration when communication fails and understanding breaks down. For many neurodivergent children, that breakdown isn’t just between people. It happens inside. Big emotions can arrive suddenly. Powerfully. Sometimes all at once. And when a child struggles to name what they’re feeling — or why — the result can look like an overreaction, a shutdown, or behavior that leaves peers and adults confused. Those emotional spikes often invite judgment instead of curiosity. And for a child who already feels misunderstood, that gap only grows wider. But emotional intelligence isn’t something you either have or don’t have. It’s something that can be taught. Through evidence‑based supports — like explicitly teaching emotions, using special interests to explore feelings, co‑regulation strategies, and parental modeling — neurodivergent children can build emotional intelligence. They can learn to understand emotions, manage them, and use them — in themselves and in others. And that ability isn’t soft. It’s foundational. On this episode of A World of Difference: Embracing Neurodiversity, we meet the Losee family, who are raising two sons with autism and intentionally nurturing emotional intelligence by asking thoughtful, forward looking questions about how situations make them feel, how others might feel, and the consequences of words and actions. Our national panel breaks down the key aspects of emotional intelligence in neurodivergent children — and the evidence based strategies families can use to strengthen it at home and at school. And you’ll meet musician and advocate Bing Futch, whose lifelong journey with ADHD has shaped not only how he creates music, but how he connects, teaches, and helps others see neurodiversity differently.

    27 min
  2. Jan 3

    A World of Difference: Embracing Neurodiversity | Pathways to STEM | S6E5

    For neurodivergent students, STEM learning can feel like a Dickens novel — “the best of times, the worst of times.” One page brims with curiosity, creativity, and a hunger to understand how things work. The next reveals classrooms not built for how they learn, leaving them confused, discouraged, or left behind. That disconnect doesn’t just affect the classroom; it can block the road ahead. STEM jobs are growing twice as fast as other fields and already pay, on average, more than double non-STEM roles. But when learning environments don’t fit, neurodivergent students risk being locked out before they even get started. Here’s the good news: when families, educators, and communities reimagine STEM — from kindergarten coding to college robotics — students who learn differently can thrive. They can build, explore, and lead in ways that honor their strengths and ignite their passions. On this episode, we meet a Colorado college student with autism who’s engineering a future that fits — powered by his talent, his tenacity, and a mechanical engineering degree. Then, a panel of national experts shares practical strategies for nurturing STEM confidence at every age — from tackling math anxiety to igniting coding curiosity. And later, we introduce our newest Difference Maker: a teen trailblazer whose love of science is inspiring a movement and helping kids see themselves in STEM.

    27 min
  3. 12/20/2025

    A World of Difference: Embracing Neurodiversity | Fostering Empathy Among Neurotypical Peers | S6E4

    It’s been said that before you judge someone, you shouldwalk a mile in their shoes. But when the person being judged is neurodivergent, it’s often hard for neurotypical peers to even find those shoes — let alone slide into their moccasins. For children — who are often conditioned to mock, marginalize, or misunderstand anything that strays from the so-called “norm” — it can be especially tough to find common ground. Why does a classmate laugh at the “wrong” time? Or react in a way that seems unexpected? Or fixate on something others overlook? It takes empathy. And helping neurotypical children andteens develop empathy for their neurodivergent peers is essential to building inclusive classrooms, campuses, and communities. The good news? With awareness, perspective-taking, sharedexperiences, and intentional modeling, parents, caregivers, and educators can help kids get closer to stepping into those moccasins. On this episode of A World of Difference, we explore an innovative online platform that helps neurotypical parents, caregivers, and students better understand how kids who think and learn differently experience the world. Our panel of national experts shares practical strategies for parents, schools, and communities to nurture empathy and inclusion. And we meet our latest Difference Maker — a Grammy-nominated musician who discovered that the most powerful way to help others experience life through his autistic son’s eyes was note by note.

    27 min

About

"A World of Difference" celebrates and supports families who are navigating the journey of learning differences. The show is produced by Beacon College (America's first accredited baccalaureate institution dedicated to educating students who learn differently). Episodes examine neurodiversity issues related to learning disabilities, ADHD, dyslexia, autistic spectrum disorders, and learning differences from birth through the baccalaureate years through compelling storytelling, conversations with experts, viewer Q&As, and interviews with successful/famous individuals with learning differences.