Practical support, grounded in real learning principles.
Accessible Hive tools are designed to be simple enough for real life, while staying grounded in evidence informed practices connected to regulation, routines, communication, executive functioning, social learning, and independence.
What evidence informed means here
Evidence informed does not mean every tool on this site has been individually studied as a clinical intervention.
It means Accessible Hive is influenced by research backed and evidence aligned practices used across autism support, education, visual learning, occupational therapy, executive functioning support, explicit teaching, co regulation, communication support, and neurodiversity informed care.
Our core belief
Children learn best when their bodies and brains are supported first.
When a child is overwhelmed, anxious, overloaded, shut down, or struggling to process language, they may need support before they can fully access communication, flexibility, problem solving, or new skills.
The Accessible Hive learning flow
Many Accessible Hive tools follow a simple path:
This flow helps children move from body support to visual understanding, guided practice, real life use, and reflection.
Introducing the CAPABLE Hive Framework
Accessible Hive uses the CAPABLE Hive Framework to organize research informed ideas into a simple parent friendly map.
CAPABLE helps adults look earlier in the chain before behavior gets bigger. Instead of asking only, “How do I stop this behavior?” we ask, “What is happening underneath this moment, and what support is needed?”
C — Clues
What do we notice first? Body signs, facial expression, movement, tone, avoidance, shutdown, sensory seeking, or sensory overload.
A — Arousal
What state is the nervous system in? Calm, wiggly, anxious, frustrated, overloaded, or shutdown.
P — Planning
What support is needed before the demand? Visuals, first then, task breakdowns, fewer words, movement, quiet, or a smaller step.
A — Acquisition
What skill is still developing? Communication, flexibility, waiting, emotional awareness, problem solving, or asking for help.
B — Belonging
Does the child feel safe, understood, and supported? Connection and co regulation often come before teaching.
L — Life Application
Can the skill be practiced in real life? Home, therapy waiting rooms, stores, playgrounds, meals, bedtime, and transitions.
E — Empowerment
Can the child build independence over time? Self advocacy, communication access, choice, and knowing what helps their body.
A full CAPABLE Hive Framework page is coming soon with a deeper explanation of how this framework connects to regulation, executive functioning, communication, social learning, and independence.
Practices that inform our tools
Visual Supports
Visual schedules, first then boards, social stories, and picture supports can help make expectations more predictable and concrete.
Co Regulation
Children often borrow calm from a regulated adult before they can consistently use coping tools independently.
Executive Functioning Supports
Routines, visual steps, timers, checklists, and task breakdowns can support planning, flexibility, transitions, and follow through.
Explicit Instruction
Many skills benefit from direct teaching, modeling, guided practice, repetition, and reflection.
Body Based Supports
Sensory supports, body awareness, movement, and regulation strategies may help support readiness for participation and learning.
Real Life Practice
Skills become more meaningful when they transfer into daily routines like hygiene, transitions, meals, bedtime, outings, and home life.
Trusted research sources
Accessible Hive is not built from one single program. It draws from several respected research areas that support visual learning, regulation, communication, problem solving, executive functioning, and real life skill practice.
The resources below are the strongest sources behind the way Accessible Hive tools are designed.
NCAEP Evidence Based Practices Report
The National Clearinghouse on Autism Evidence and Practice reviewed autism intervention research and identified evidence based practices for autistic children, youth, and young adults.
- Supports visual supports, task analysis, social narratives, AAC, functional communication, parent implemented intervention, self management, and movement based supports.
- Strong foundation for Accessible Hive tools like visual schedules, first then boards, social stories, choice boards, task breakdowns, and regulation supports.
AFIRM Modules
AFIRM provides free modules that show how to plan, use, and monitor evidence based practices with autistic learners from birth to age 22.
- Helpful for understanding how evidence based practices are actually used.
- Supports tools that use visual supports, prompting, task analysis, social narratives, communication supports, modeling, and self management.
James Gross Emotion Regulation Model
James Gross is a foundational researcher in emotion regulation. His process model helps explain why support can happen earlier in the emotion chain, before a child reaches full escalation.
- Supports the Accessible Hive idea of helping earlier, not only reacting after behavior gets bigger.
- Connects to changing the situation, reducing demands, shifting attention, and supporting the body before teaching.
Murray and Rosanbalm Co Regulation
Co regulation research explains how caring adults support the development of self regulation through warm relationships, structured environments, and direct coaching.
- Supports the Accessible Hive belief that children often need adult support before independent regulation.
- Connects to parent scripts, calm adult support, routines, visuals, and practice over time.
Ross Greene and Lives in the Balance
Collaborative and Proactive Solutions helps adults look for lagging skills and unsolved problems instead of assuming challenging behavior is willful defiance.
- Supports asking, “What is getting in the way?”
- Connects to problem solving, reducing shame, understanding the child’s concern, and planning before the next hard moment.
Carla Mazefsky Autism Regulation Research
Carla Mazefsky’s work helps explain why emotion regulation is an important area of support for autistic people and why regulation needs to be understood more deeply.
- Supports explicit, visual, individualized regulation support for autistic learners.
- Connects to Bee CALM, body clues, coping supports, family routines, and real life practice.
Sensory Emotion Regulation
Sensory emotion regulation research explains how sensory input can influence emotion and why body based supports may help before language heavy teaching.
- Supports the idea that movement, sound, touch, visual input, smell, and taste can affect regulation.
- Connects to the Bee CALM belief that the body may need support before the brain is ready to learn.
Kelly Mahler and Interoception
Interoception focuses on noticing internal body signals like hunger, pain, tension, bathroom needs, temperature, anxiety, and overwhelm.
- Supports noticing body clues before behavior escalates.
- Connects to body checks, emotional awareness, self advocacy, toileting, feeding, anxiety, and regulation supports.
Zones of Regulation
Zones of Regulation is a widely used framework for helping children and adults build shared language around regulation states, feelings, and support tools.
- Useful as a common language for regulation states.
- Best used as one helpful framework within a larger evidence informed toolbox.
Mona Delahooke Brain Body Approach
Mona Delahooke’s work helps parents and professionals look beneath behavior at nervous system state, sensory needs, development, and relational safety.
- Helpful for parent friendly language around behavior as a signal.
- Connects to the Accessible Hive belief that children need safety, support, and understanding before teaching.
Research continues to evolve, and no single strategy works for every child. Families should use what is helpful, adapt supports to fit their child, and seek individualized professional guidance when needed.
Why tools are mobile first
Hard moments rarely happen at a desk beside a laminator.
Families may need support in the grocery store, bathroom, waiting room, kitchen, playground, bedtime routine, or during a transition out the door.
What this is not
Accessible Hive is not a replacement for individualized care.
These tools are designed for educational and family support. They do not replace medical care, therapy, occupational therapy, speech therapy, mental health services, behavioral support, crisis support, or individualized professional guidance.
Every child is different. Families should use what is helpful, adapt supports to fit their child, and seek professional support when concerns are complex or beyond the scope of home tools.
Transparency
Accessible Hive uses technology and AI assisted tools to help organize ideas, draft content, improve accessibility, and build practical resources more efficiently.
The overall framework, educational philosophy, tool direction, and lived experience behind Accessible Hive are human led.
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