Your guide to medications and complementary and alternative treatments for ADD & ADHD.
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Strategies For Teachers
Prior to Diagnosis: You are probably in the best position to determine whether a child's attention, concentration, effort on school tasks, and classroom behavior are unusual for your grade. If you are observing an unusually high frequency of inattentive, impulsive or hyperactive behaviors that continue for six months despite class-wide interventions (use of agenda; Color Chart with mild reinforcers), prompts and reminders by you (and class aides), placement of the child near you, and notes to parents, my recommendation is that you meet with the parents, share your observations, and suggest that they review this information with their child's physician. THIS IS NOT THE SAME AS SAYING YOU SUSPECT THAT THE CHILD HAS ADHD. However, you are in a unique position to share with parents what happens when their child is asked to attend to instruction, and concentrate and complete tasks that require sustained mental effort. You can also share that there are a number of medical conditions that can contribute to problems attending (e.g. visual problems, hearing problems, anemia, hypoglycemia, ADHD, etc.) and that the best person to evaluate the situation is the child's physician. After Diagnosis: Once a child has been determined to have ADHD, the CSE needs to conduct both an evaluation for learning disabilities and a functional assessment. The LD evaluation is needed because learning disabilities occur in approximately 50% of children diagnosed with ADHD. The functional assessment (i.e. evaluation of the ways that ADHD is adversely affecting educational performance) is needed because ADHD is known to limit alertness and adversely affect educational performance. Both state and federal educational laws are clear in asserting that patients with ADHD qualify for assistance because of impairment in educational performance. This impairment is due to difficulty in sustaining alertness throughout the day. The presence of a specific learning disability is not required in order for children to receive assistance. Common Interventions: Primary/Intermediate:
To learn more about classroom strategies, check out video's by Dr. Monastra and Dr. Joswiack, available at our online store. |
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