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Parent Guide To Help Children With ADD-ADHD PDF Print E-mail
Tuesday, 13 July 2010
Article Index
Parent Guide To Help Children With ADD-ADHD
Helping your child with ADD/ADHD
Stay positive and healthy yourself
Establish structure and stick to it
Set clear expectations and rules
Encourage movement and sleep
Help your child eat right
Teach your child how to make friends
Related links

 

Establish structure and stick to itChildren with ADHD are more likely to succeed in completing tasks when the tasks occur in predictable patterns and in predictable places. Your job is to create and sustain structure in your home, so that your child knows what to expect and what they are expected to do.


Tip for helping your child with ADD/ADHD stay focused and organized

  • Follow a routine.
    It is important to set a time and a place for everything to help the child with ADD/ADHD understand and meet expectations. Establish simple and predictable rituals for meals, homework, play, and bed. Have your child lay out clothes for the next morning before going to bed, and make sure whatever he or she needs to take to school is in a special place, ready to grab.

  • Use clocks and timers.
    Consider placing clocks throughout the house, with a big one in your child’s bedroom. Allow enough time for what your child needs to do, such as homework or getting ready in the morning. Use a timer for homework or transitional times, such between finishing up play and getting ready for bed. 

  • Simplify your child’s schedule.
    It is good to avoid idle time, but a child with ADHD may become more distracted and “wound up” if there are many after-school activities. You may need to make adjustments to the child’s after-school commitments based on the individual child’s abilities and the demands of particular activities. 

  • Create a quiet place.
    Make sure your child has a quiet, private space of his or her own. A porch or bedroom can work well too, as long as it’s not the same place as the child goes for a time-out. 

  • Do your best to be neat and organized.
    Set up your home in an organized way. Make sure your child knows that everything has its place. Role model neatness and organization as much as possible


Avoid problems by keeping kids with attention deficit disorder busy!

 

For kids with ADD/ADHD, idle time may exacerbate their symptoms and create chaos in your home. It is important to keep a child with ADD/ADHD busy without piling on so many that the child becomes overwhelmed. Sign your child up for a sport, art class, or music. At home, organize simple activities that fill up your child’s time. These can be tasks like helping you cook, playing a board game with a sibling, or drawing a picture. Try not to use the television or computer/video games as time-fillers. Unfortunately, TV and video games are increasingly violent in nature and may only increase your child’s symptoms of ADD/ADHD.

 



Last Updated ( Wednesday, 14 July 2010 )
 

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