Clarity, Community, Support, and Hope
for Parents of Neurodivergent Children.
Understanding your child’s behavior, learning, or emotions can feel overwhelming.
The Neuropsychlopedia offers calm, evidence-based guidance to help you make sense of what you’re seeing, without fear, pressure, or rushing to labels.
If You ARE HERE, YOU MAY BE WONDERING…
Is this typical — or something more?
Am I missing something important?
Why does every article online feel alarming or contradictory?
How do I support my child without panicking or overreacting?
You’re asking thoughtful questions. That already matters.
What YOu WILL FIND HERE
The Neuropsychlopedia is an educational platform created for all parents and providers, but especially those of neurodivergent children. Dr. Fontanetta provides trustworthy, accessible information grounded in science, along with real-world insight. We replace confusion and misinformation with clarity, connection, support, and hope.
✔ Clear explanations rooted in clinical science
✔ Language that makes sense; no jargon, no fear
✔ Guidance that respects your pace and your intuition
✔ Support for curiosity, not urgency
✔ A community that understands how hard this can be
Created by a pediatric neuropsychologist who believes parents deserve clarity, compassion, and time.
ENJOY OUR BLOGS
IS THIS TYPICAL? QUIZ
Not sure if what you’re noticing is typical?
You don’t have to decide anything today.
This short, gentle quiz can help you reflect on what you’re seeing, without labels or pressure.
Why Parents Trust The NeuropsychlopediA
Science-based, clinician-vetted information
Clear explanations of the latest research
Honest guidance, no quick fixes
Providing clarity, not confusion or false hope
CONCERNED ABOUT YOUR CHILD?
Read our FREE guide, “Is This Typical?”
“As clinicians, we spend years in the context of academia, where we are taught what is “right”, how to “operate”, and certainly how to “label”, with few opportunities or confidence to engage in critical thought. The goal here is to provide understanding, support, and validation, without over-pathologizing, misdiagnosing, misrepresenting, and most importantly supporting those who need and deserve it most, underlying bias or confusion.”