Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Learning
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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.
Experts estimate that between 4-10% of our youth are now diagnosed as having Attention Deficit Disorder. It can be frustrating and discouraging to deal with symptoms of ADD. Here’s the great news: there is nothing “wrong” with your child or with you as the parent; there is nothing that needs to be fixed. You and your child have ALL of the resources within you to experience success in school, at home and in the world. If your child is not succeeding in school or at home, it simply means that she doesn’t have effective tools for doing so. Once we teach her world-class skills for succeeding at home and in school, she will no doubt be successful. A diagnosis can be helpful in giving us a framework for understanding what the reason is behind the challenging behaviors or the poor school performance. You can understand the behavior better when you understand where it is coming from.
When you understand that it’s not a matter of whether or not your child is trying hard enough, rather that it is simply a matter of her not having the tools to be successful in learning, then you can respond differently to it. ADD, Dyslexia and other learning differences are a way of describing how a person’s brain is wired or the way in which they process information. It doesn’t mean that they don’t process or learn information; it simply means that they do it better using certain strategies or processes than with others, as we all do.
The first step is to assist the child in slowing down the pictures in her own mind and slowing her body down so that she can learn and implement simple, effective learning strategies and begin to experience more success at school as well as at home. In addition, we want to provide her with the kind of environment that will best support her and her particular needs; for most kids, and especially for kids with ADD, the environment that is most supportive of their needs is one that is unconditional
, structured and consistent while providing them enough freedom to learn to negotiate the world on their own.
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