• Home
  • About
  • 10 Questions
  • Resources
    • Alternative Education
    • Home Education Magazines
    • Homeschool & Education Pathways
    • Homeschool Curriculum
    • Homeschool Research
    • Homeschoolers Network
    • Homeschooling in Malaysia: Legal Issues
    • Homeschooling Sites
    • Homeschooling the Learning Disabled
    • Homeschool and IGCSE
  • Starting homeschool?
  • Preschool: A response
    • Institutionalized Early Childhood Education and Development: Background and Issues
    • Troubling Trend in Early Education
    • Preschool: Dissenting voices
    • Preschool Gains: Do they last?
    • Assessing Proposals for Preschool and Kindergarten
    • Educating Young Children in Math, Science, and Technology
  • Bookshelf
  • Guest Writers
  • Notices
    • AUGUST 2009
    • SEPTEMBER 2009
    • OCTOBER 2009
    • NOVEMBER 2009
    • DECEMBER 2009
    • JANUARY 2010
    • FEBRUARY 2010
    • APRIL 2010
    • MAY 2010
    • JUNE 2010
    • JULY 2010
    • NOVEMBER 2010
    • DECEMBER 2010
    • APRIL 2011
    • JULY 2011
    • OCTOBER 2011
    • APRIL 2012
National Association for Gifted Children Starting homeschooling homefrontier Facebookhomefrontier Facebook

Ideas to Help the Bright ADHD Child Succeed Socially

Posted by DAVID BC TAN under: Guest Writer; LD on 18 May 2012.

GUEST WRITER: Dr. Steven Richfield
soprislearning.wordpress.com

Bright children with ADHD may succeed in the academic world but have trouble socially. Knowing the right answers, even when attention drifts in and out of focus, is not as challenging as figuring out how to appropriately direct their behavior in the presence of others.

As ADHD compels children to seek social stimulation—be it from peers, siblings, or adults—they may appear needy and annoying, and embarrass themselves and family members in the process. Doors of social opportunity close, and friendships erode; emotional pain and social exclusion result. Parents and teachers watch helplessly as the book-smart ADHD child unwittingly sabotages his or her social standing.

If this circumstance resonates with the dramas and dilemmas facing a child you know, read on for coaching tips.

Build a dialogue that blends sensitivity to their circumstances and confidence that they can improve their people skills. Observe how aware these children are of the disapproving signals sent from others when their social approach oversteps boundaries. List the ways they may overstep: talking too much, voice volume too loud, interrupting conversations, imposing self-serving topics, ignoring obvious cues to show interest in and listen to others, physical restlessness and verbal impatience with delays, etc. Reassure them that these social errors can be corrected, just as they can correct problems on assignments and tests in school.

Most ADHD children know their diagnosis but do not comprehend the social struggles related to their condition. Educating a child about this issue does not offer an excuse to escape from responsibility. In contrast, it reinforces the vital importance of learning social intelligence to ensure that ADHD does not inhibit their climb to happiness and success in life. Explain how the task of managing feeling states (frustration, eagerness, happiness, impatience, boredom, excitement, etc.) affects all kids and teens, but that ADHD makes it harder due to the trouble with impulse control. Liken impulsivity to fuel that pushes feelings into verbal and physical behaviors.

Emphasize that the first step to being more “socially smart” is building a pause button in their thinking when they feel the early signs of impulsivity starting to push them into behaviors. Help them identify these physical precursors to impulse discharge, such as finger tapping, hand drumming, fidgetiness, bodily warmth, chest heaviness, queasiness, or some other warning sign. Gently tell them what you have noticed about their impulsivity issues and offer observations from other teachers, coaches, instructors, or caretakers.

Develop a simple and practical plan for them to have at their disposal when social events threaten to trigger the costs of impulsivity. Delineate the various social groupings they come across, such as peer group, peer one-on-one, adult one-on-one, adult with peer group, family, extended family, etc. List the behaviors that others expect from them based on the implicit rules of these groupings (i.e., greater or lesser talking, elaborate answers, listening with interest, relevant questioning, etc.). Review their success after encounters and brainstorm ways to further improve.

Published with permission
———————————————————————————-
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Dr. Steven Richfield is a child psychologist in Plymouth Meeting, PA. He has developed a child-friendly self-control/social skills building program called Parent Coaching Cards. It is available at www.parentcoachcards.com His new book, The Parent Coach: A New Approach To Parenting In Today’s Society is available through Sopris. It offers strategies to educators looking for practical, hands-on tools to help all children self-monitor and self-manage their behavior. Sopris offers a range of educational materials for children’s reading curriculum & writing curriculum.

Comments

comments

Leave a Reply

Recent Posts

  • How to escape education’s death valley
  • Wolsey Hall Oxford: Home study courses for IGCSE and A-level
  • Digital Education Show 2013 (KL)
  • The end of education
  • School is a bad idea

Top Posts

    I'm sorry, but you don't seem to have the WordPress.com stat plugin installed on this site.

FAQs

• Why Homeschool?
• How to start homeschooling?
• How many students are being homeschooled in Malaysia? At what rate is homeschooling growing in Malaysia?
• Are there legal restrictions to homeschooling in Malaysia?
• What curriculum options are available?
• Do homeschooled children sit for local, public exams? How do they make the transition to university?
• How about homeschooling the learning disabled?

Web Browsers

This website is best viewed with Firefox 2, Firefox 3, OR Safari.

Search

Categories

Archives

Sponsors

Sonlight: The Best Overall Homeschool Company

Recent Posts

  • How to escape education’s death valley
  • Wolsey Hall Oxford: Home study courses for IGCSE and A-level
  • Digital Education Show 2013 (KL)
  • The end of education
  • School is a bad idea
  • More students are being educated at home
  • Homeschooling on Evening Edition BFM 89.9
  • Quotables 1: A good educational system
  • A NEW CHAPTER IN THE HOMESCHOOLING MOVEMENT
  • Just for Laughs 13

Recent Comments

  • Kath Calagui
  • Fiona MacColl
  • Glory
  • Rozita
  • kristenlau
  • Mary
  • kamlin
  • Ross
  • CN Chong
  • Rivlyn Lim

Subscribe

  • Entries (RSS)
  • Comments (RSS)

Homefrontier is powered by WordPress