No rankings. All five are worth your feed. Different angles, different formats, all signal.
@drrossgreene — Ross Greene has been writing and speaking about collaborative problem-solving with kids for decades. His core argument: kids do well when they can, not when they want to. The account is quiet but when he posts it’s worth reading slowly.
@theottoolbox — Occupational therapy perspective on sensory, attention, and regulation. Practical, not preachy. Good for understanding what’s happening in the body before you try to address what’s happening in the behavior.
@adhd_love — A couple documenting what ADHD actually looks like in a relationship and a family. Not advice. Just honest. The kind of content that makes parents feel less alone at 11pm.
@黄老师的教室 — A Chinese educator whose videos show alternative classroom approaches to learning differences. No caption needed — the visual storytelling is clear across languages. Worth following for the perspective shift alone.
@exceptionalminds — Profiles of adults who learned differently as kids, told in their own words. Useful for reminding yourself — and your kid — where this road can go.