Attention Deficit Disorder (ADD) and Learning "Disabilities"
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.
In order to help you understand your child's experience of the
world, you need to understand exactly what goes on in the mind
of a young person with ADD. Here's a way in which you can begin
to understand the experience of a child with ADD. I want you to
imagine that you're driving in a rainstorm without the
windshield wipers on. Pretty frustrating, isn't it? Imagine the
effort it would require to keep your mind focused on the road
ahead just in order to keep yourself and others feeling safe and
protected. Yet, that is precisely what goes on in the mind of a
young person with ADD. The screen simply becomes blurred without
the ability to use the wipers to get rid of unnecessary
cloudiness. She is trying as hard as she can to process all of
the information coming into her experience. Of course, what
often happens is that the conscious mind becomes overwhelmed and
she may simply shut down, stop paying attention, and give up or
it might be played out physically in the body which might be
seen as anxious, aggressive or hyperactive behavior.
The first step in helping your child to learn effectively is to
help her determine what her particular strategy is for learning
and then to teach her very precise, effective strategies for
learning information most effectively. A visual learning
strategy is the most effective strategy for learning academic
tasks like spelling words, math facts and vocabulary words;
learning visually makes learning fun, interesting and much less
time-consuming.
In order to teach a young person a visual learning strategy, she
must first believe that she CAN learn by making pictures in her
mind. Often, young people who are diagnosed as having ADD or
some other "learning difference" feel that they can't control
their own mind, but rather that their mind controls them. In
order to begin to teach effective learning strategies, we need
to begin with helping the child to see that indeed she CAN
control her own mind and the pictures that she makes in her mind.
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.