
In Unit 1 you explored how neurodivergent traits can affect behaviour and how distress may present in policing environments.
This session builds on that understanding by helping you recognise when standard policing communication may no longer be effective, and when adapting your approach becomes necessary to reduce risk and prevent escalation.
In fast‑moving policing situations, communication is often:
For many neurodivergent individuals, especially under stress, this style can increase overload rather than resolve the situation.
When a person is struggling to process information, continuing to speak at the same pace, repeating commands more forcefully or adding new instructions can escalate distress.
The key skill at this stage is not changing what you want to achieve but recognising when how you communicate needs to shift.
Building on the signs of distress you identified in Unit 1, the following behaviours often indicate that a person’s ability to process information is reducing in the moment:
These are decision points. They signal that continuing with standard communication may increase risk.
At this stage, it may help to briefly recall how overload and shutdown affect communication:
In both cases the person is not choosing to disengage. Their capacity to respond is temporarily reduced.
You stop a man in his 20s outside a shop. He avoids eye contact, fidgets and repeats your request for ID. When you ask again, he goes silent and looks away.
Pause and reflect:
This scenario demonstrates how quickly an interaction can shift from routine to high‑risk if signs of overload or shutdown are missed.
When communication breakdown isn’t recognised:
Recognising this early gives you more options, not fewer.
In the next session you will learn practical communication strategies designed to:
These are everyday tools you can use as soon as communication begins to break down.
Before moving on, take a moment to reflect.
Using your learning journal, think about a recent interaction where communication felt strained or unproductive.
This reflection focuses on recognising the need to adapt, not judging past actions.
In the next session you will learn about how to communicate differently when a neurodivergent person is struggling to process information, or is overwhelmed by a situation.