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BRIGHT IDEAS NEWSLETTER ONLINE

THIS ISSUE: Reduce the Deficits of Attention Deficit Disorder

   Other Online Issues: The Best Negativity and Apathy Busters (Click)
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Here's a surplus of great ideas to manage attention deficit disorder. This issue was first published in 1994, and updated in 2006. This issue, along with all of our print Bright Ideas Newsletters are included in the Quickest Kid Fixer-Uppers Series books and ebooks (click here for more information on that series). Click here to view all the Bright Ideas Newsletter issues.
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Teach Visual Tracking
Train youth to have "eyes on teacher". Use a rag doll to show "do" and "don't" behaviors; model the "do" behaviors then drill the students on the skills. Use a magnet and metal to illustrate how students' eyes must be "stuck" on the teacher.

Teach Auditory Tracking
Teach students to have "ears" on teacher. Use a rag doll to demonstrate, then model, and drill skills into habits. Give verbal instructions how to locate special treats or a prize as a fun way to train and drill listening skills.

Teach Pacing Skills
Train youth to slow rapid action by playing "Make That Move." Played similar to the TV game show, "Name That Tune," as the student is about to speed through a task such as walking across the room, ask the youth how long it will take to "make that move." Typically the youth gives an answer such as "10 seconds," then challenge the child by saying "I bet you could make that move in 2 minutes," to which the child responds "Oh yeah, I could make that move in 3 minutes," and so on. When the student has identified a reasonable time frame, say "Make That Move." Now the child must "stretch out" their behavior to complete the task. Use "Make That Move" constantly, with homework and other tasks that the child normally races through. It can be a fun, enjoyable way to build better habits.

Teach Distraction Control
poster to help distracted and ADHD students Train youth to identify distractions as "attention-grabbers" to avoid, modify or request help with. Use a loud radio, hair dryer, whistling, musical instruments and other distractions to drill students to spot and manage distractions rather than be captivated by them. Students may think that teachers know when a pupil is having problems such as being distracted. Our Poster #22 (click for details) powerfully conveys to students that if they need assistance, they will have to ask for it. Now, you can teach students to ask for help with distractions.


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Like the interventions shown here? Then get all of our Bright Ideas Newsletter interventions in our Quickest Kid Fixer-Uppers Series of books and ebooks, just $15 each, click here. Each volume has dozens and dozens of completely unique and powerful methods that cover many of the wide range of coping, school and social problems that ADD and ADHD students can face. If you like the solutions on this page, bring them home with you by buying this series now. You can discover that there are truly innovative, much more effective, problem-stopping solutions for ADD and ADHD students. You've found the solutions you've been searching for.


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Reduce the Deficits of Attention Deficit Disorder, Part 2 of 3
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Provide Motivation First
The child with ADD/ADHD may not be uncomfortable with the behaviors that concern adults. For example, show them the hazards of moving too fast before offering help to slow them down. To gain their interest, assist them to compare the results of moving very rapidly to moving more moderately in activities that are important to them, such as playing sports, for example.

Don't Just Ask or Demand
Often, asking or demanding won't work. Instead, teach missing skills in memorable, lasting ways with many repetitions, then drill new skills into lasting habits. Vary the content of the repetitions or you'll get complaints. Before expecting a youngster with ADHD to walk down the aisle in between desks at school without touching everything in her path, first you will have to motivate her and give her the skills to get down the aisle with her hands to herself.

Be Patient and Stay Positive
Many youth with ADD or ADHD quickly can sense your frustration or negativity about them. Expect small, incremental change, not leaps and bounds. If you are wrong, you'll gladly accept the rapid improvement, but if you are right, you won't be as disappointed and discouraged at what you could otherwise view as too little progress. Remember: a child challenged by ADD can no more "just stop it" than you can just lose 10 pounds or stop smoking. Even subtle negativity will usually exacerbate existing problems. These students are likely scapegoats if they come to believe they do everything wrong. Notice the good. For example, highlight the importance of speed and high energy shown by a youngster with ADHD during overtime in a basketball game. It's easy to lose sight of the fact that there can be some good aspects that can be emphasized and built on.

ADD and Conduct Disorders: You Can't Address One and Not the Other
Here's a stunning fact about ADD that you may not know. Research suggests that perhaps half of ADD-affected youth are also conduct disordered or oppositional-defiant. If you work with ADD-affected youth who are also absolutely unmanageable and extraordinarily hurtful to others, then learn how to manage this child by learning about conduct disorders. Ordinary methods will not work with conduct disorders, but large numbers of ADD-affected youth and children may also be conduct disordered, meaning that you must use special behavior interventions if you want to be able to successfully manage them. If you ever find ADD students utterly unmanageable, this may be the missing piece that explains why. We have a resource that can further explain this phenomena, and deliver immediate help to stop the out-of-control behavior. Order our popular
Anti-Social Youth and Conduct Disorders (click here for details). It's available as a book or instant download, printable e-book.

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Reduce the Deficits of Attention Deficit Disorder, Part 3 of 3

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Check out these attention-getting ADD behavior intervention strategies. These lively devices are ready-to-use to help you better manage your hard-to-manage ADD and ADHD students.

It's tough to change behaviors that may not even have names. Give names to some of the behavior problems so the child can conceptualize the concerns; they may not be clear on that now. Remember, the child may not be uncomfortable with their speediness or distractibility so they may not be at all as acutely aware of it on a minute-to-minute basis as you are. These names avoid labeling the child but do create a picture of the problem:>

Speed-Racing Behavior: This term avoids labeling the child, but does label the behavior.

Slow-Rolling Behavior: This term could describe the behavior of children who don't move at a typical speed, or talk very much at all. Mentioning this type of concern gives the child a range of behaviors and a way to compare himself.

Pace-Setting Behavior: This can be the goal for children who move too quickly or slowly. This term can generate a picture for the child and offers specific words that the child can use to discuss the target behavior.

To order this issue or other issues of the Bright Ideas Newsletters, get our Quickest Kid Fixer-Uppers Series (shown below, click to view) which contains all the newsletters. View all the Bright Ideas Newsletter issue topics by scrolling down the page or by clicking here. This article is excerpted from the full print newsletter. Copyright 1994, 2006 by Youth Change. All rights reserved.


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THE ANSWERS TO YOUR QUESTIONS

Q: Classroom management is a huge issue for me. My students are totally out of control. Is there anything you can suggest that would help? Nothing is working at all so far.

A: We are known for potent, attention-grabbing interventions, so yes, we can help-- even though things have gotten pretty bad. For classroom management problems, there are three things that we recommend you do. These ideas will be a lot different from the approaches you've been using without success.
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Here are the three areas to tackle. First is skills. Few schools have a plan to train kids to be students. You can have big kids who don't look, act, or sound like students. You can have little kids that don't look, act, or sound like students. Either way, you are working with untrained, unprepared youngsters. That's a good first step: to stop assuming that kids have a clue how to behave at school. Teach them everything from how to show up on time, to how to talk to the teacher, to how to raise their hands, and so on.

If you have very difficult students, skip to the second or third steps, which are to build motivation and a positive attitude about school. "Can't be done," you're thinking. If you use conventional methods, you're right. If you use compelling motivation-makers and bad attitude-busters, then you may be able to transform your students' negative outlook on education. How do we know? Because our methods were created and tested with students just like yours. Don't you think that you would be working with entirely different young people if your students actually believed that school is more important than the air they breathe? Of course, they would be different if they believed that. That's what our unusual, hard-hitting interventions can do.

Take a look at Poster #2, shown here. If you want to see a larger picture of it, click here. Poster #2 is a good example of a powerful intervention that can begin to convince even the most negative youngster that school may be important. (You don't need to buy the poster to use this intervention; just read the poster and use the information on it.) No one intervention will turnaround your students, but by using a variety of more effective interventions, you can really have more much impact than conventional methods-- such as talk and sanctions-- could ever achieve. If you tackle all three of the relevant areas-- skills, attitude and motivation-- you may begin to get more of the results you wanted all along. After all, you signed up to teach; you didn't sign up to spend your career fighting for control of the classroom. For nearly 20 years, we've been helping teachers get back in charge of the classroom, and back to teaching, and we can help you too. You might even start to love your job again.

These three areas are just the start. The other aspect that you need to address-- that we won't cover here-- is how to match your interventions to the types of students you are teaching. That's not information we can condense into a small space, but, for example, you would use radically different methods with a conduct disorder (your most misbehaved student) vs. a fragile, shut-down youngster. If you don't know how basic mental health information, and how to match your techniques to your types of students, that's something you will need to catch up on at some point. If you don't know a lot about your most misbehaved students, conduct disorders, learning about that youngster is absolutely critical. Our books and classes cover this child, but you can get an introduction to this impossible-to-manage youngster by clicking here. Whenever you have an extremely out-of-control classroom, you probably have at least one conduct disorder who is radically ramping up the problems. You can't use conventional methods with conduct disorders. There is no other option: You need to learn basic mental health information about this difficult student if you are want to get back in charge. That's why our top way to help you with an out-of-control classroom is to have you come to a live workshop, because that's where we cover it all.

So, for serious, prolonged classroom management problems, we prefer to have you come to a live Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel Troubled Youth Workshop because that way we can hear from you the exact problems areas you are facing, then we tailor the entire seminar to offer you targeted solutions. Our workshop roams the U.S. in both fall and spring each year, and is probably coming soon to a city near you. We actually customize each live workshop to fit your exact needs, and to solve your exact classroom management problems. Click here for information on the live workshop option. Note that we always have half-price work study financial aid slots available if you have a bad budget. We give out those slots only by phone, so call us for details at 1-800-545-5736.

If you can't come to a live workshop, our recorded class is the next most comprehensive option. Click here for information on that solution. Our books and ebooks can also help you. Two of our favorites for reversing serious, on-going classroom management problems are shown below, or you can click here for details. They are available as books and as instant download ebooks. That means you can be reading your problem-stopping ebook in as little as 60 seconds.




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