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Tips for teachers
Suggested Classroom Interventions For
Children With ADD & Learning Disabilities
Children
with attention deficit disorder and/or learning disabilities can be a challenge for any
classroom teacher. This page provides some practical suggestions that can be used in
the regular classroom as well as the special education classroom. By looking through
a given list of interventions, a teacher will be able to select one or more strategies
that are suited to a specific child in a specific environment.
Ideas for Attention Deficit Children
Strategies for Cognitively
Impulsive Children
Suggested Classroom
Accommodations for Specific Behaviors
Ideas for Attention Deficit Children
Children whose attention seems to wander or who never seem to "be
with" the rest of the class might be helped by the following suggestions.
- Pause and create suspense by looking around before asking questions.
- Randomly pick reciters so the children cannot time their attention.
- Signal that someone is going to have to answer a question about what is
being said.
- Use the childs name in a question or in the material being covered.
- Ask a simple question (not even related to the topic at hand) to a child
whose attention is beginning to wander.
- Develop a private running joke between you and the child that can be
invoked to re-involve you with the child.
- Stand close to an inattentive child and touch him or her on the shoulder
as you are teaching.
- Walk around the classroom as the lesson is progressing and tap the place
in the childs book that is currently being read or discussed.
- Decrease the length of assignments or lessons.
- Alternate physical and mental activities.
- Increase the novelty of lessons by using films, tapes, flash cards, or
small group work or by having a child call on others.
- Incorporate the childrens interests into a lesson plan.
- Structure in some guided daydreaming time.
- Give simple, concrete instructions, once.
- Investigate the use of simple mechanical devices that indicate attention
versus inattention.
- Teach children self monitoring strategies.
- Use a soft voice to give direction.
- Employ peers or older students or volunteer parents as tutors.
Strategies for Cognitively Impulsive Children
Some children have difficulty staying with the task at hand. Their verbalizations seem
irrelevant and their performance indicates that they are not thinking reflectively about
what they are doing. Some possible ideas to try out in this situation include the
following.
- Provide as much positive attention and recognition as possible.
- Clarify the social rules and external demands of the classroom.
- Establish a cue between teacher and child.
- Spend personal discussion times with these children emphasizing the similarities between
the teacher and child.
- Get in a habit of pausing 10 to 16 seconds before answering.
- Probe irrelevant responses for possible connections to the question.
- Have children repeat questions before answering.
- Choose a student to be the "question keeper."
- Using a well known story, have the class orally recite it as a chain story.
- When introducing a new topic in any academic area, have the children generate questions
about it before providing them with much information.
- Distinguish between reality and fantasy by telling stories with a mix of fact and
fiction and asking the children to critique them.
- Assign a written project that is to contain elements that are "true,"
"could happen but didnt," and "pretend, cant happen."
- Do not confront lying by making children admit they have been untruthful.
- Play attention and listening games.
- Remove un-needed stimulation from the classroom environment.
- Keep assignments short.
- Communicate the value of accuracy over speed.
- Evaluate your own tempo as teacher.
- Using the wall clock, tell children how long they are to work on an assignment.
- Require that children keep a file of their completed work.
- Teach children self talk.
- Encourage planning by frequently using lists, calendars, charts, pictures, and finished
products in the classroom.
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