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Social Smarts for ADD/ADHD Children


Use vacation time to teach your ADD/ADHD child the language of friendships

By: Steven M.S. Kurtz

Provided by:  ADDitude

Help your child succeed socially

Inattention, hyperactivity, impulsivity. 

The problems that impede school performance in children with  ADD/ADHD also thwart the ability to make and keep friends. Often, the subtle social cues that are the currency of relationships seem to go unnoticed. The ADD/ADHDer may fail to recognize, for instance, that he is standing too close to his friend, or that the friend wants to keep playing the game he has become bored with. Or she may single-mindedly seek to protect her toys from being moved or her game rules from being changed, appearing bossy or unyielding.

Students acquire social skills - such as negotiating, accepting the choices of others and offering compliments - from being part of a classroom community, or from working together in small groups. For most kids, these skills are inherently rewarding, and, once learned, are kept. But children with ADD/ADHD need reminders and rewards throughout the year. So take advantage of summer social gatherings to prompt, monitor and reinforce relationship skills that will enhance friendships and classroom achievement.

 

Video: Help your ADHD child navigate the classroom and social settings

 

Play to your child's strengths. Well-chosen activities can call forth the best from your child. Encourage her to share her talents with friends -- building a birdhouse, say, or cooking a meal.

Invite the right playmate. Encourage visits from friends your child gets along with -- preferably, those who are role models for good social skills. If you're inviting a new friend, keep the interaction to an hour or so until you know that the two are compatible.

Define the skills. Expressing behavioral goals in specific and positive terms is more effective than using phrases like "be nice" or "don't be mean." Tell your child that you'll be watching to see that he's sharing, negotiating, complimenting, taking turns. When you catch him being good, let him know you're pleased.

Use a behavioral report card. This type of contract sets children up for success by telling them what to do and when to do it and by providing incentives. The social approval that results will eventually be its own reward. Typically, a behavioral report card lets a child earn points for behaviors and trade them in for rewards. The best rewards are enjoyable activities, such as staying up late, taking a bubble bath or renting a video, rather than money, food or costly toys.

Promote social skills everywhere. Children with ADD/ADHD have trouble applying skills learned in one situation to other situations. To help your child generalize social skills, help him to practice in a variety of different settings and with different people -- on the playground, at a bowling alley, at the homes of friends. Begin by prompting the behavior -- reminding him which skills to use, then monitoring and reinforcing the behavior with specific praise, such as "Teddy, I love the way you let Nate pick the first game. That's a great way to keep friends."

Coordinate the coaches. Make sure that coaches, counselors, grandparents and sitters know which social skills you're working on, and know how to prompt, notice and reinforce desired behaviors. The more your child practices these skills, the more likely that he'll continue to use them when school starts again in the fall.

 

 

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