- 1 -
A New Way of Thinking About Paying AttentionA PARENT’S GUIDE TO UNDERSTANDING ATTENTION DEFICIT DISORDER
- 2 -
A New Way Of Thinking About Paying Attention A PARENT’S GUIDE TO UNDERSTANDING ATTENTION DEFICIT DISORDER
He can’t focus. She can’t sit still. The teacher called and said he is disruptive in the classroom. If
you are thinking that it sounds like Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD), you might be right. But then
again, maybe not.
As parents, we want our children to be successful, happy, contributing members of society. So when
we suspect that our child might have ADD, it can be very discouraging.
But the good news is that suspecting that your child might have ADD is not an endpoint—it’s a starting point. For the past 20 years, Oxford Learning has worked with children who have problems paying
attention. We’ve implemented a unique hands-on approach that has allowed for the development
of many wonderful programs and ideas. Our unique strategies help parents and teachers work
with distractible and inattentive children who have gone on to become effective, successful students.
- 3 -
We know that every child can learn and grow. We also believe that all children—even those with a severe ADD—can learn to develop new
methods of control, awareness, and thought, and that they can become fully functional members in
their classrooms and ultimately in society.
So, how does a child get an attention deficit? Is there anything you can do about it? Whose fault is it?
Until now, too much attention has been paid to the disability part of ADD and too little to the
ability part. That’s the part we can work with. Even though the development of better concepts is
the primary area of damage for children with ADD, very few programs actually exist that teach
ADD kids how to think more clearly.
Teachers often complain that ADD kids fall behind in school. But it really doesn’t matter how
much stuff from the curriculum that students miss. The real problem is that they fail to develop
efficient thinking processes. More to the point, most teachers and students do not know that paying
attention is a learned skill. Your child can learn it.
Does My Child Have ADD?
Let’s begin with a critical distinction. A simple attention deficit (Attention Deficit Disorder, or
ADD) is one that involves the child’s ability to pay attention even when she or he is sitting still.
Hyperactivity and impulsivity (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, or ADHD) refers to the
child who always fidgets or moves or suddenly bursts into unexplained action.
According to the most up-to-date diagnostic checklists, certain behaviors are considered to be
warning signs that a child may be suffering from ADD or from ADHD. Read the Symptoms List
...very few programs actually exist that teach ADD kids how to think more clearly.
- 4 -
and Early Warning Signs List and ask yourself if you noticed any of the symptoms they describe
when your child was younger. If you did, you can then obtain copies of the Teacher’s Checklists
and use the Tracking List that is provided in section 5. Use the results from these checklists—which
address early warning signs and symptoms—along with the results from any formal assessments
or medical consultations to get a comprehensive evaluation of your child’s attention skills. This
information can help you and your family doctor make the correct diagnosis.
1. SymptomsAttention Deficit Disorder Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
√ Has difficulty following directions and completing assignments
√ Has difficulty organizing tasks, activities, and time
√ Misses details or makes careless mistakes in schoolwork
√ Avoids or dislikes tasks requiring sustained mental effort
√ Often loses things or is forgetful
√ Prefers uncomplicated tasks
√ Does not seem to listen
√ Is easily distracted
√ Can be impulsive
√ Has trouble remaining seated
√ Fidgets, squirms, and moves constantly
√ May talk excessively
√ May have trouble playing alone
√ May seem to be always “on the go” as if “driven by a motor”
√ May have trouble playing quietly
√ Seems to run and climb everywhere
√ Interrupts adults, teachers or other children
√ Blurts out answers
√ Has trouble waiting turn
- 5 -
2. Early Warning SignsThese are some of the early warning signs. Do not panic if they describe your child. There is still
much work to be done before you arrive at the final diagnosis of ADD.
1. IF THE CHILD HAS SIBLINGS, WAS THIS CHILD MORE ACTIVE IN THE WOMB THAN HIS OR HER SIBLINGS?
YES _____ NO_____
2. WERE THERE DIFFICULTIES ESTABLISHING NORMAL SLEEP PATTERNS? DOES YOUR CHILD STILL SEEM TO
REQUIRE MUCH LESS SLEEP THAN OTHERS?
YES _____ NO_____
3. DOES YOUR CHILD SWITCH FROM ACTIVITY TO ACTIVITY MORE QUICKLY THAN THE AVERAGE CHILD?
YES _____ NO_____
4. IS IT DIFFICULT TO GET YOUR CHILD TO SIT STILL IN THE CAR OR IN RESTAURANTS?
YES _____ NO_____
5. WILL YOUR CHILD WAIT FOR A TURN? DOES HE OR SHE GRAB TOYS OR BUTT IN WITH HIS OR HER IDEAS?
YES _____ NO_____
6. DOES YOUR CHILD CLIMB ON TOP OF THINGS THAT OTHER KIDS DON’T EVEN DARE TO CONSIDER?
YES _____ NO_____
7. DOES YOUR CHILD SOMETIMES DAYDREAM OR LOOK AT YOU WITH A BLANK STARE AS YOU TALK TO HIM?
YES _____ NO_____
A score of four or more Yes answers indicates that your child is exhibiting ADD behavior.
- 6 -
3. Resources for Your Child’s Teacher
The ADD-H Comprehensive Teacher’s Rating Scale (ACTeRS)
This is a new scale that focuses primarily on the twin issues of attention deficit and hyperactivity.
This makes a great distinction between the hyperactivity component and the attentional
component. Contrary to popular belief, these two issues are found together in less than 20% of the
population of diagnosed ADD children today.
The Conners Teacher Rating Scale (CTRS)
This is probably the most widely used and best-known checklist for teachers. It consists of 28
questions that measure four factors: hyperactivity, hyperactivity index, behavior, inattention, or
passivity. Used in conjunction with the Conners Parent Rating Scale (CPRS), the two allow a
comparison that will help identify the child who is struggling in the class but not with the rest of his
or her life.
The Child Behavior Checklist (CBCL) by Achenbach
This is another popular teacher checklist consisting of 112 questions that yields ratings on
anxiety, aggressiveness, delinquency, depression, withdrawal, obsessiveness, somatic complaints,
and hyperactivity. The CBCL is much more diagnostic than the CTRS in rating and defining
emotional and behavioral factors, but it lacks the comparative checklist for the parent.
- 7 -
4. Diagnostic Questionnaires for the Parent
The Conners Parent Rating Scale (CPRS)
This is the most widely used parent questionnaire. We recommend the longer version as it yields
some information on anxiety, behavior, psychosomatic issues, learning problems, impulsivity, and
hyperactivity. As well, it provides a hyperactivity index.
The Home Situation Questionnaire (HSQ)
This is an easy-to-use checklist that may help you to distinguish between normal behavior and
ADHD behavior. There are 16 categories in which parents are asked to judge behavior in each
category. If children exhibit excessive behavior in seven or more areas, it is considered that the
behavior parallels that of ADHD children. However, there is one possible difficulty with this
instrument. Children with high scores prompted by emotional issues may appear to be ADHD, so
care must be taken in interpreting the results.
5. Make a Tracking List
In our early years, we worked with a terrific young man by the name of Ryan. He had flaming red
hair, couldn’t sit still, and would eat only peanut butter sandwiches. When we started to work with
Ryan at the teaching stations, he would suddenly disappear below the table. His school had warned
us that he was probably ADD. His family doctor had asked us to help. Mom had been given a
prescription for medication (Ritalin), but wanted more for Ryan than just medication.
We used a Tracking List to observe his behavior and concluded that he was not ADD. When he
ducked under the table or ran around the room, he was responding to his emotional needs. We
- 8 -
believed that, with help, he could learn to control this behavior by himself. It was triggered by
anxiety. We needed to develop new strategies to help Ryan deal with this anxiety. We decided that
there was to be no judgment involved. It was neither right nor was it wrong when Ryan dove under
the table or ran around the room.
Rather than get upset and engage in a struggle for control, we climbed under the table with Ryan
and announced that we were going to teach him to read in either place!
Soon, his anxiety lessened and he began to trust us. He was willing to work above ground a little
more. Sometimes we still had to climb under the table just to show him that we were serious, but it
was not judgmental, it was respectful. If Ryan needed to be there, so did we. We believed that he
could regulate his own behavior. It worked.
The point of this story is that Ryan’s mom never had the prescription for Ritalin filled.She gave him a little time and he overcame the problem himself. He was not a true ADD child.
Today, Ryan is in high school and getting A’s! Without the Tracking List, we might have agreed
with the ADD suggestion, and Ryan’s story would have been totally different.
Use the Tracking List included. Make lots of copies, and use it to observe behavior over at least a
four month period and in many different situations. Do not observe your child always doing the
same activity. If there is a real ADD, it will come through.
Make a mark every time you observe an actual incidence of the behavior. Do not overkill—we are all
somewhat distractible, so give your kid a break. You have to do this many times. If there is an actual
ADD, you will not have to invent it.
- 9 -
TRACKING LIST (make lots of copies)
Date:_________Time:_________ Activity:_____________________________________________
Using the numbered scale, estimate the occurrences of this behavior that you observed on this date.
(1: occurred rarely; 10: occurred frequently)
DOES THIS BEHAVIOR DESCRIBE THE STUDENT? (1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)
• Has trouble following directions, completing work ____
• Has trouble organizing tasks, activities and time ____
• Misses details or makes careless mistakes ____
• Avoids or dislikes tasks requiring sustained effort ____
• Often loses things or is forgetful ____
• Often does not seem to listen ____
• Is easily distracted ____
• Can be impulsive ____
DOES THIS BEHAVIOR DESCRIBE THE STUDENT? (1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10)
• May have trouble remaining seated ____
• Moves constantly ___
• May talk excessively ____
• May have trouble playing by self ____
• May have trouble playing quietly ____
• Seems to run and climb everywhere ____
• Interrupts adults, teacher, other children ____
• Blurts out answers ____
- 10 -
6. Psychoeducational Assessment
Observing behavior alone is often insufficient to identify ADD. Testing can be extremely valuable
in making the final diagnosis. For a complete psychoeducational evaluation, it will be necessary to
use test instruments that measure the following:
√ Oral Language: Since the development of good language skills is essential for efficient
thinking and is most often affected by ADD, this evaluation will help you to determine the
depth of the problem.
√ Non-Verbal Intelligence: Many students show great promise in this area yet exhibit many
signs of ADD. Scoring in the above average range would be difficult for a child with a significant
attentional weakness. This test may help you discover much about your child’s potential.
√ Various Cognitive Skills: Thinking skills such as visual memory, verbal memory, combined
memory, short-term and long-term memory, analysis, synthesis, and abstract reasoning are
covered. Clues to the areas most affected by the attentional weakness are exhibited here.
√ Central Auditory Processing (CAP): There are a variety of simple CAP tests appropriate
for the psychoeducational test situation. This will not be as complete an evaluation as the
audiologist will give, yet a CAP weakness masquerading as ADD may become evident here. If
so, ask your family doctor to refer your child for CAP testing immediately.
√ Academic Evaluation: It will be important to know just how basic skills—reading, writing,
spelling, grammar and math—have been affected by the problem.
Take the results of the testing with you when you confer with your family physician or learning
professional.
Observing behavior alone is often insufficient to identify ADD.
- 11 -
Don’t Think of Attentional Weaknesses as a Disability
It is time to stop making kids into victims. Using the most modern tests and checklists, competent
professionals are identifying kids with ADD at an alarming rate. Once this diagnosis has been
made, these kids are identified as having a deficit!
When we are confronted with a child who does not seem to be able to pay attention, our first assumption should not be that they cannot pay attention, but rather that they are just not paying attention. Consider the following: You would never say, “My child cannot play the piano! He must have piano
disability!” If your child cannot play the piano, the reason is usually that he has never learned how!
Why then, when a child cannot pay attention, do we first assume that he must have a deficit?
We need to adopt a major paradigm shift. A change in our thinking keeps paying attention in the
realm of the possible. It assumes that, before we panic and turn to medicine and other drastic
measures, we will attempt to teach the child how to pay attention. It assumes that the child has
something to do with this, that the child will be, and has to be, a willing and major participant in
the process. It is an active process, not a passive one.
Why then, when a child cannot pay attention, do we first assume that he must have a deficit?
- 12 -
Can Someone Learn to Pay Attention?
Many children do suffer from legitimate attention deficits. But that finding just hides the main issue—
that many, if not most, of the attentional problems encountered in today’s classrooms are the result
of learned behavior and not true disabilities. Most kids can’t pay attention because they have not
learned how.
We don’t need to stop measuring and testing kids, but we do need to reconsider our lifestyles and the ways that we teach children.
The Pace of Family Life
Recently, I opted to leave work a few minutes early and spent the entire evening reading and talking
with my two younger children. It just happened to be a night without a hockey practice, a dance
lesson, a piano lesson, or a friend visiting. My 11-year-old son wanted to know about factors, and I
had the time to figure it out and teach him. That was fun!
There is a message in this: We all need to take time in our lives for quiet moments and to properly
pace our lives.
Television, Movies and Video Games
Take out a stopwatch and time the intervals between cuts in any TV show or movie. (A cut is the
length of time the camera keeps the same focus or viewpoint.) Most intervals are broken into 3 and
- 13 -
4 second units! That’s right, a few seconds is all you usually get before a new image is flashed on the
screen in front of you. Watch enough television and you may be training your conscious mind to
work in similar short, fast bursts.
The same thing happens in shows that teach children how to read! Seconds is all that we are giving
our children to see, integrate, and learn.
And who could have imagined that even kids who seem unable to follow simple instructions in
class are able to progress to the 87th level of the video game of the year? Processing information
simultaneously and instantly, our children are often glued to these games for hours. While this may
help them become fighter pilots, it may not be helping them learn to concentrate and integrate
information in a classroom.
Generally, teachers require more than three or four seconds to teach a concept. Students certainly
need more than a few seconds to understand and integrate.
The Death of Reflection
Last weekend, my daughter filled our house with friends. They created forts and nurseries and schools
and stores. Every kid was assigned a task. Some were storekeepers. Some were parents. Some were
infants. Before assuming their roles, almost every child went about preparing for their role. Many
rearranged their space while talking to themselves about who they were and how they would act.
This was very interesting for me. They made time to reflect and consider… they prepared! They
created their own space and demanded enough personal time to get ready to have fun.
Compare this with the typical classroom. There is little time for quiet reflection and even less personal
Students certainly need more than a few seconds to understand and integrate.
- 14 -
space. My daughter had more time to prepare for play than most kids have to learn math or reading.
She and her friends knew that they needed to concentrate, so they created an environment where that
would be possible. When her older brother tried to intrude and rush the pace of the game, he was
roundly defeated and shooed off to his corner until everybody was ready. It seems that, left to their
own devices, kids understand the need for quiet reflection, concentration, and paying attention.
Crowded Curriculums and Classrooms
Classrooms are getting more and more crowded as governments try to balance education budgets.
In one high school in my district, there are neither enough books nor enough desks for the kids.
Many sit on the floor and share textbooks. With this crowding, the noise level has increased and
students are having difficulty concentrating.
Add to this the demands of our enlightened society. We demand that schools teach whatever
ethical values are currently popular in our politically correct society. Unfortunately, this just creates
crowded minds to go along with the crowded classrooms. We are jamming so much useless and
irrelevant information (facts, dates, figures, names, formulas, etc.) into the heads of our children so
quickly, with no time for reflection and no place for concentration, that they are not learning—they
are just memorizing.
In fact, this is creating two classes of kids—those who can figure out the school game (memorizing
without necessarily understanding) and those who cannot. Sadly, if you have a good memory for
unrelated information and you are willing to cram as much as the curriculum requires into your
mind without questioning, or perhaps even understanding, you will be a good student today.
We are jamming so much useless and irrelevant information into their heads , there is no time for reflection or concentration. They are not learning, just memorizing.
- 15 -
Is It Any Wonder?
I am not arguing that attention deficits do not exist. Some real attention deficits exist and require
treatment and programming. Children with true ADD or Central Auditory Processing Deficits
cannot pay attention, but most kids today do not suffer from these disorders – they merely have a
short attention span – because paying attention is a learned skill.
These kids are trained to be that way by the way they acquire language and develop concepts; by
the pace of modern life; and by the influence of television, movies, and video games. The forces
of brief TV cuts, constant motion, and their busy, busy lives have trained their cognitive process to
look for quick bites and fast answers.
And our early development of language as a tool of communication rather than of thinking has internalized the way in which we pay attention and think. We are creating children with passive minds and short attention spans.
Go and sit in a Kindergarten, Grade 1, 2, or 3 classroom for two hours. You will see that programs
are based on the Activity Based Learning Theory. This theory says that kids who can do what they
want, who are given a chance to roam between many different tasks, will eventually choose something
and will discover wisdom. The actual formula is: Interest + Activity = Discovery + Knowledge.
So in many classrooms today kids can be found moving endlessly from one centre to another. An
amazing noise level! Confusion, disruptions, and lots of botherment, as Eeyore might say!
- 16 -
A Simple Game
For years we have been working with ADD children at Oxford Learning by using a simple game.
We begin by placing a small device consisting of approximately 20 beads strung out on a wire that
has been embedded into a piece of wood in front of the student. We do this before we begin to
work on any school-related task, such as reading, writing, or math. We push all the beads to the left
side of the wire, and as soon as the student becomes distracted or goes off-task, we click one bead
over to the right side. We do not explain to the kids what we are doing. We do not tell them that we
want them to learn new skills. We merely want to make them aware of how their minds work.
It is important to us that we never imply that it is wrong to become distracted. Kids who are
distractible are merely following their own truths. That is how they are. Accept this, because
significant change must come from within or it will not come at all.
Awareness is the key. After working with kids in this environment for a few months, they begin to be
aware of the fact that their attention drifts.
Most kids accept the workings of their minds as a given. Just as we do not fret about how to make our
hearts pump, so too do we not express concern about how our brains work. Unfortunately, while the rest of our bodies work more or less automatically, our brains require training and exercise. By the time a child is in school and is having difficulty with attention, many undesirable behaviors
have become automatic. The road back is through awareness. Help kids to become aware of what
their minds are doing.
Significant change must come from within or it will not come at all.
- 17 -
A Plan of Action
Play the Attention Game
Most children are unaware of the actions of their minds, so they are unaware of being off-task. By
the time your child is school age, self-awareness is a concept that can be readily understood. You
can model awareness of what the mind is doing earlier, and many children will get it, but don’t be
discouraged if your child does not.
Younger Children: Use activities that your child understands—for instance, the game of catch
played with a soft ball—and demonstrate both paying attention and not paying attention…and their
consequences. Throw the ball to your partner. When it is caught, tell your child “See, Mom was
paying attention and she was able to catch the ball.” Then have someone throw you the ball when
you are looking somewhere else. After it bounces off your face, say “Oh! I wasn’t paying attention.”
Do it again with a story. Describe what it means to pay attention, and then read the story aloud.
Discuss the events of the story. “I remember that stuff because I was paying attention.”
School-Age Children: Have someone read to you. Begin by having a small monologue with
yourself. “OK, now I am going to hear a story. I am going to pay attention because I am interested
in the story.” Let the reading begin for a few moments then ask your child to tell you how well she
thinks you are paying attention. If she doesn’t know, teach theses guides for reading.
1. Keep your eyes on the page.
2. Ask yourself, “Am I on the correct page?”
3. Ask yourself, “Am I listening? Can I answer questions about the story?”
Guides for Reading.
1. Keep your eyes on the page.
2. Ask, “Am I on the correct page?”
3. Ask, “Am I listening? Can I answer questions about the story?”
- 18 -
Continue with the exercise, but look away from the reader after a few more moments. Begin to
hum a tune and tap your fingers. Then ask your child how you are doing.
By teaching kids how to observe and grade our performance, we will be helping them to automate
the process and principles of paying attention. When your child tells you that you weren’t paying
very good attention, agree and explain, “ Yes, I started out OK, but soon I started to hum a song
that I enjoy, and I forgot to listen.”
The last element to introduce is the mental holiday: day-dreaming. This is when you look like you
are paying attention, but you really are not. Laugh when you catch her not paying attention. This
game can go on for months. While you are playing, your child will be learning the deep methods
and rules without stress. Play this game often and in many different situations. Be goofy! Be
outrageous! It’s not homework—it’s fun. When your child doesn’t want to play, stop immediately.
Eventually you will be able to generalize the rules to:
1. “Am I watching (the page, the teacher, etc.)?”
2. “Am I doing the right activity?”
3. “Am I paying attention? Can I answer questions about this activity?”
Measure the Attention Span
After you have played the Attention Game until your child is a master, you will be ready to move
on to the next phase: measuring his or her attention span. Once again, the object of this phase is
awareness. Set goals. Write the following on a 3’ x 5’ card.
- 19 -
I Can Pay Attention!
My goal is to pay attention for _______ seconds or _______ minutes
To do this, I must:
1.____________________________________________________________
2.____________________________________________________________
3.____________________________________________________________
4.____________________________________________________________
I Can Pay Attention!
My goal is to pay attention for _______ seconds or _______ minutes
To do this, I must:
1.____________________________________________________________
2.____________________________________________________________
3.____________________________________________________________
4.____________________________________________________________
#
- 20 -
DEALING WITH ATTENTION PROBLEMS AT HOME
Begin by making sure that your child actually has ADD. We have already discovered that most kids
simply have not learned to pay attention. This lack of skill, when combined with anxiety, lack of
confidence or low self-esteem, can produce a condition that looks like ADD.
Here are some rules and suggestions that should help around the home. Get everybody involved. It
is a family project.
A NEW WAY OF THINKING
It’s Not Your Fault
ADD is not your fault. It was not caused by something you ate while pregnant or something you said.
In many cases, the primary symptoms disappear after your child has learned new attention skills. Do
not personalize your child’s problem. It has nothing to do with you! Your self-worth is not tied to his
or her achievements or behaviors. Stay calm, be objective and try to maintain a sense of humor.
Do Not Battle For Control
Do not get into control battles with your child. He or she is just trying to survive and is not trying
to make you crazy. Be careful not to structure situations where control will be an issue. Do not offer
choices where one choice is good and the other bad. Offer two good choices only.
Most kids simply have not learned to pay attention.
- 21 -
Share Your Time
Sometimes, it will seem as if the ADD child requires all of your attention. Not so. Share your time
evenly. ADD kids must learn the lessons of self-responsibility at some point. It is better and safer to
learn this at home than at school.
Focus On Success
Encourage positive statements. Break the cycle of negativity that surrounds your child. Too much
emphasis has already been placed on what she or he cannot do. Forget that. Look at what she or he
can do and celebrate it.
Add Is Not A Disability. Don’t Make It One
Kids can change. They do. Do not let ADD become a crutch. “I can do it!” should always be the
standard. If you have a child who appears to be ADD, do not let the rest of the family or friends
brand the child as different. Get rid of the expectations that this child will screw up or have trouble.
These expectations often become self-fulfilling prophecies. Even if your child does have ADD, it can
become more of a blessing than a curse if it is handled suitably.
Distinguish Behavior From The Child
Remember that the behavior you do not like is just behavior, not the child! Separate the behavior
from the child. For example, say “I love you but it upsets me when you leave your toys all over the
living room.”
Responsibility Is For Everyone
Do not excuse the ADD child from responsibilities. This may cause stress with the other children.
Have clear expectations and ensure that your child understands these expectations.
- 22 -
OVERCOMING STRESS
You may be suffering from more stress than you think. Raising a child with ADD can be stressful!
Let’s try to become aware of what causes our stress reactions and then make a plan to help lessen
them. In most cases, behaviors that cause stress are actually great teaching opportunities. Bearing
in mind that you are trying to help your child learn how to develop better control, you can use
stressful situations to teach cause and effect.
Delay Your Response: OK, you turned your head for a split second and your kid just pulled the
display stand over in the restaurant. Adrenaline shoots into your blood stream, quickening your
heart rate, causing you to feel embarrassed and, finally, you get mad at your kid. Don’t! Instead,
delay your response. Remain calm and reason your options out.
Understand the Outcome: During a stressful situation, keep your positive goals in mind. This will
help to lessen the intensity of your reaction and help you to remain calm and focused.
Change Your Perspective: It is important to understand and hold the full context in your mind at
all times or else you will feel like a hamster
spinning on a wheel. Cut out the Advice
for Parents card and keep it close, so you
can review and apply it. If you can hold
your own goals in mind, you will be more
able to understand the situation that has
occurred in relation to those goals.
Raising a child with ADD can be stressful ... remain calm and reason out your options.
#
ADVICE FOR PARENTS
It’s Not Your Fault
Do Not Battle For Control
Share Your Time
Focus On Success
Add Is Not A Disability. Don’t Make It One
Distinguish Behavior From The Child
Responsibility Is For Everyone
- 23 -
DOING SCHOOL WORK
Establish Routines
Schedule a consistent study time and stick to it. Before you choose the time, review your child’s
commitments—hockey, ballet, music, and so on. Pick a time that is free from commitments. One
hour is usually more than enough.
Provide Personal Space
If possible, dedicate one small part of the home as a special study area. Keep clutter to a minimum.
Create a quiet work environment. Sorry kids, no radios, TV, or phones! New research clearly shows
that they distract and lower school scores.
Demonstrate
When teaching new tasks, demonstrate them. Combine repeated displays of actions with short, clear, simple instructions. Patiently repeat the demonstration until your child learns.Getting Started
Kids with ADD, like most kids, are usually disorganized. If you expect quality work from ADD
kids, you will have to teach and re-teach organization skills. The major problem is often that
students do not know how to begin. This leads to frustration, which leads to distractions.
Schedule a consistent study time and stick to it.
- 24 -
Before beginning homework or assignments: review the instructions, break them down into simple
sequential tasks of three, if possible. Have your child repeat the instructions before beginning.
Most students do not know how to break a task down into its component parts and then schedule some
work time for each part. You can help them to learn this skill by having them work on outlining and
recognizing main ideas, underlining key words and highlighting the instructions before starting homework.
Build Confidence
Understand that students with ADD lack confidence. They are often afraid to try and their self-
esteem is battered. You can help by removing judgment from their lives. Change your attitude. You
may be amazed at the quality results you will get when you help your child learn how to do the work.
The Family That Plays Together…
We want to be able to help our kids learn how to focus and pay attention. This may seem like a daunting task, but it is not! Giggles and laughs, as well as serious conversations, are all part of the solution. Paying attention means learning to stretch the attention span – and that can be improved by
playing games! Yep, some family fun time can help your child develop a major skill.
A number of hearing, listening and comprehensive games can be found on our website. Go to
www.oxfordlearning.com/ADD—and have fun!