Secrets To Better Communication With Your ADHD Teenager
Meet Our Speakers
Diane Dempster, CPC, PCC, MHSA
Parent Coach and Co-Founder ImpactParents
Diane Dempster, MHSA, CPC, PCC is a professional coach, speaker, author and educator with 20 years of corporate leadership experience. Diane is the co-Founder of ImpactParents.com, a coaching organization for parenting neurodiverse kids, co-creator of Sanity School® and the Sanity School® Certification Program for professionals. An experienced leader, expert in change management, and all-around life-sherpa, Diane helps clients create deep, sustaining change and open their eyes to life. And no one needs this more than parents of complex kids. Diane received a Masters from the University of Michigan and coaching certification from the Institute for Professional Excellence in Coaching (iPEC).
Elaine Taylor-Klaus, CPCC, PCC
Parent Coach and Co-Founder ImpactParents
Elaine Taylor-Klaus, PCC, CPCC co-founded the first global coaching organization for parenting neurodiverse kids (ImpactParents.com). The mom in a complex family of 5, she co-created a comprehensive and empowering collaborative problem-solving method for fostering independence: the Impact Model for taking a coach-approach to parenting complex kids. An author, speaker, coach and trusted advisor, Elaine is the co-creator of Sanity School® for Parents and the Sanity School® Certification Program for professionals, co-author of Parenting ADHD Now! Easy Intervention Strategies to Empower Kids with ADHD, and the author of The Essential Guide to Raising Complex Kids with ADHD, Anxiety and More.
We felt strongly that parents of complex kids with learning differences needed someone to provide support to help their kids navigate life's complications, and we realized that "someone" was us! Who better than two professional moms whose lives and families had been transformed by coaching to pave a new path for other parents.
- Diane Dempster and Elaine Taylor-Klaus
Parents and educators want their children and students with learning differences to become independent and believe in themselves! They want to help them genuinely feel capable of becoming successful adults. When parents and educators have the support they need, they can become who they really want to be for their children and students.
- Diane Dempster and Elaine Taylor-Klaus