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CHADD (Children and Adults with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder)
Children and Adults with Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: CHADD is here for you.
Visit our blogs on parenting, relationships, and coaching
and you’ll find hope and understanding from others who deal with
challenges just like the ones you face.
www.chadd.org
For local information, visit www.chaddnorcal.org. A 7 week parent to parent family training on ADHD is offfered in Walnut Creek.
Teach ADHD Website
The
mission of Teach ADHD is to provide teachers and other educational
professionals with resources and materials that have been specifically
designed to bridge the substantial gap between current
neuroscientific understanding of ADHD and classroom practice. These
resources and materials are relevant for teaching and supporting
students who are inattentive, off-task, disorganized and/or have
weaknesses in executive functioning and working memory.
This
website has a very thorough description of the specific challenges
these children experience in the classroom and step by step suggestions
for creating classroom supports and interventions to help. Great for
printing out information to discuss and share with your child's general
ed teacher.
http://research.aboutkidshealth.ca/teachadhd
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Executive Functioning
About Kids Health has an excellent six part series on Executive Functioning at
http://www.aboutkidshealth.ca/News/Executive-Function-Part-One-What-is-executive-function.aspx?articleID=8024&categoryID=news-typeAbout Kids Health also has another good article about ADD/ADHD and Executive Functioning at
http://www.aboutkidshealth.ca/ADHD/ADHD-and-Executive-Function.aspx?articleID=6892&categoryID=AD-nh1-04a Following is an excellent article from LD on Line (
www.LDonline.org), a great website on learning disabilities and ADD. It's a helpful handout for teachers:
Lazy Kid or Executive Dysfunction?
By: Tracy Landon and Linda Oggel (2002)
Do
you have a student who seems incredibly lazy? Intentionally forgetful?
Absolutely unmotivated? Deliberately late? Do you feel like a broken
record? Constantly asking where his homework is? Constantly asking him
to clean out his desk? Constantly asking her to pick up stuff around
her desk? Do you have a student who is chronically distracted? Are you
repeating directions to get the student back on task when he gets
distracted? Do you have a student who knows the information but can’t
seem to communicate it to you in a logical sequence? Do you ask a
question and get an answer that’s related but not quite connected to
the question? If so, it might be that the student is not using these
behaviors intentionally.
One of the least studied and most frequently overlooked contributors
to academic and behavioral problems is a problem in the frontal lobes
of the brain known as executive dysfunction (Parker, 2001). Students
with executive dysfunction have problems of a neurobiological nature
that particularly affect “planning, flexibility, organization, and
self-monitoring (Ozonoff, 1998, p.282). These students may have
“difficulty picking a topic, planning the project, sequencing the
materials for a paper, breaking the project down into manageable units
with intermediate deadlines, getting started, and completing the
activity. And because these students frequently underestimate how long
something will take, they’ll generally leave the project until the
night before it is due” (Packer, 2001, p. 2). Just imagine how
difficult it would be if you had trouble organizing your time,
materials, belongings, thoughts or any combination of these!
If you believe your student has executive dysfunction (also called
executive function deficits—called “executive” because the tasks are
often the responsibilities of a company executive), consider helping
the student to organize himself. Begin by developing a relationship
with the student that is emotionally supportive. Emphasize that you
want the student to succeed. Help the student to understand his
problems and that there are strategies he can use to organize him/
herself. For example, you could say, “Kids with executive function
problems have difficulty in certain areas. There are many ways you can
help yourself. Let’s talk about the areas and supports. Then you can
choose which ways to help yourself.” Then describe the following
potentially troublesome areas and potential supports that are
identified in the shaded area. (Linda Parker, 2001):
Managing Time
- Use time management techniques such as the use of checklists, prioritized “To Do” lists, and prioritizing assignments.
- Estimate how long a task will take and then check on the accuracy of your estimate.
- Plan for more time to do a project that you think you will need.
- Break long assignments into chunks with time frames for completing each chunk.
- Establish intermediate deadlines for big projects with your teacher and show her the project at these deadlines.
- Use a word processor and time management software such as the Franklin Day Planner, Palm Pilot, Lotus Organizer.
- Write the due date on the top of each assignment in a brightly colored marker.
Managing Space
- Ask the student to identify ways he would like to organize himself.
- Have separate work areas with complete sets of supplies for different activities.
- Schedule a weekly time to clean out your desk and book bag (in school).
Managing Materials
- Leave a large supply of pencils/pens in the class-room with the teacher.
- (For
younger students) Have one notebook in which all assignments are
recorded. Ask your teacher to check the assignments at the end of each
day to insure that the assignments are recorded properly and that the
necessary materials to complete the assignments are packed in your book
bag. Also ask her to make sure the due date for each assignment is
written at the top of each page.
- (For older students) Use a
three-ring binder with organized sections enclosed by a zipper.
Headings could include “Assignments Due/Date,” “To Do Tonight,”
“Ongoing Work.” Use dividers in the notebook that are color-coded
(e.g., Red for assignments that must be done right away, yellow for
those due at the end of the week, etc.).
- Color code
materials. Cover the textbook for one course in the same color as the
notebook for that course. Use the same color coding to prioritize
assignments.
- Establish a daily routine for school
organization and include a written version of it in the notebook (e.g.,
turn in homework at the beginning of classes, get out paper/text/pen
and check blackboard for assignment, prepare to leave class three
minutes before it ends—pack books, papers, etc., turn in assignment
book for checking and initialing at the end of each day, etc.). Use
this same approach at home (e.g., do homework at a certain time, have
parent initial homework, clean out book bag, check for necessary
supplies for school).
- Obtain two copies of each textbook. Mark one “To be left in school” and the other “To be left at home.
Managing Work
- Use a checklist to guide you through an independent
assignment. Include items such as: get out pencil and paper, put name
on paper, put due date on paper, read directions, ask teacher to
further explain if needed, do work, put work away in note-book in
appropriate section (e.g., to do tonight, to do this week), write
assignment on assignment sheet, get teacher to sign, take home and
complete work.
- Finally, have the student identify which
strategies she would like to try using and get started. Consider
meeting with the student after a week to evaluate her use of the
strategies. Be sure to praise the student’s progress rather than
focusing on areas of continued disorganization. In addition, suggest
that student’s family be included so that they can help him or her
continue the strategies at home.
As the educator you can support the student (and others) by making
some changes in the classroom. Some suggestions (Stokes, 2001, pg. 6)
you can implement include:
- Maintaining a highly structured classroom.
- Using
a written (visual) schedule to keep the student focused and “on task”
so that he or she can complete tasks as independently as possible.
- Giving written directions whenever possible (dry erase boards, index cards, etc.) rather than auditory prompting.
- Giving
fewer problems/questions on worksheets and/or creating boxes next to
each question so the student can check it off as it is answered.
- Making the classroom as distraction free as possible (away from windows, doors or favorite activity areas).
- Keeping assignment folders in specific and consistent places.
- Using a visual calendar for both school and home to help the student anticipate events.
- Using a visual timer to help the student understand time constraints.
Also, if you suspect a student has executive dysfunction, consult
with your school psychologist. While executive function deficits are
most commonly associated with Autism Spectrum Disorder, they also are
known to occur in students with ADHD, Fragile X Syndrome, conduct
disorder, obsessive-compulsive disorder, traumatic brain injury, and
schizophrenia (Ozonoff, p. 277). Although there are currently no
agreed-upon protocols that constitute a battery of tests for executive
dysfunction, several tests have been used in research that seem to tap
into aspects of the disorder. These include the Matching Familiar
Figures Test (Waterhouse & Fein, 1982), Wisconsin Card Sorting
Test, and various computerized tests. For more information on tests and
their purposes, see the resources at the end of this article.
Teach your student with executive dysfunction to organize himself.
In addition, provide support by making some adaptations in your
classroom and in your interaction style. Remember that students with
executive dysfunction are not unmotivated or willfully engaging in
problematic behavior. They really cannot organize and flexibly solve
problems themselves without appropriate supports.
The
mission of Teach ADHD is to provide teachers and other educational
professionals with resources and materials that have been specifically
designed to bridge the substantial gap between current
neuroscientific understanding of ADHD and classroom practice. These
resources and materials are relevant for teaching and supporting
students who are inattentive, off-task, disorganized and/or have
weaknesses in executive functioning and working memory.
This
website has a very thorough description of the specific challenges
these children experience in the classroom and step by step suggestions
for creating classroom supports and interventions to help. Great for
printing out information to discuss and share with your child's general
ed teacher.