The growing problem of ADD and learning disabilities is affecting an estimated 6-10% of our school-age children. Parenting or teaching a child with ADD or learning difficulties can be an enormous challenge. In this article, learn unique strategies that will assist you in providing the best possible environment for your child to experience success both at home and at school.
This growing problem impacts many areas of society and there is a growing need for effective solutions.
It requires patience of you that you may not have thought you had; persistence that you may frequently have to call upon; and consistency that you may be learning along the way.
Here are some tips to assist you in providing the best possible environment for your child to experience success both at home and at school.
When they have more options available to them, they will make better choices.
You, as the adult, are the teacher, which means that your child will model you.
If you are flexible and open to learning new ways of thinking and behaving, your child will be open as well.
There is positive intention behind every behavior, no matter how hurtful or how bizarre the behavior may seem.In other words, there is a need on some level that is being met by doing what they’re doing.
If we can look for what the purpose is behind the behavior or what need is getting met, then we can find other more constructive solutions to meeting that need.
Always look for the positive intention behind behavior.
Step into their model of the world.Imagine, for instance, what it would feel like to drive in the rain without windshield wipers and how challenging it would be to simply keep everyone in the car safe, let alone maintain any sort of emotional balance (this is what it feels like in the mind of a person with ADD).
When you communicate with them, see the communication through their eyes and through their model of the world rather than through yours; they will be much more open to what you have to say if you do.
Understand that young people with ADD operate in a world of images, so verbal and auditory communication is often the least important mode of communication to them.Words are very slow and difficult to process.
Whenever you give a young person with ADD instructions, have him overlap the words into pictures in his mind and have him feel his body following the instructions.
For instance, if you want him to do the dishes and then pack his backpack for school, have him SEE and FEEL doing the dishes and then packing his backpack.
Visual learning is the best way to learn academic subjects.Make sure they learn visually by making pictures in their mind of doing academic tasks like spelling words, vocabulary words and math facts.
When they are reading, make sure they overlap pictures with the words they are reading.
Using a visual learning strategy is more interesting, more effective, takes much less time and it’s just more fun.
Celebrate and appreciate what makes them unique.One of the biggest hurdles that young people with ADD or learning challenges face is the belief that they are “stupid”, “weird” or just “don’t fit in”.
The truth is that they are often a step away from brilliance and have the ability to see the world in ways that most of us simply can’t (think Albert Einstein, J.F.K., Cher and Robin Williams who all had learning disabilities) .
Consistently looking for and recognizing their uniqueness and value will go a long way in overcoming this belief and raising their self-confidence.
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Dealing with the symptoms of ADD or Learning “Disabilities” can be frustrating and discouraging. This article provides a new perspective of ADD and Learning “Disabilities” which will assist you in understanding your child’s experiences much more clearly. It also provides effective solutions to assisting your child to use his mind, skills and resources most effectively in order to be successful at home, at school, and in the world.Children and Learning
The number one problem that children and adolescents who are struggling in school face is that they don't have effective strategies for learning the information that is being taught to them. Students need strategies for how to learn, not just what to learn. Learn the most effective strategy for academic tasks- like learning spelling words, math facts and reading comprehension - and how it can change your child’s entire experience of school and learning into a positive one.