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Modifications for Special Needs
ADD, Gifted and Talented
ADD
& ADHD
Recommendations for School-based ADD Management
Classroom modifications
Seat students in rows. Having children sit in groups increases
distractions for the ADHD child. Seat ADD student near teacher's desk,
up front with her back to the rest of the class, but include as part of
regular class seating. It may be possible to provide tables for special
group projects while retaining rows for regular classroom seating and
independent work. Some teachers report that arranging desks in a
horseshoe shape promotes appropriate discussion while permitting
independent work. Whatever arrangement is selected, it is important for
the teacher to be able to move about the entire room and have access to
all students. Surround ADD student with "good role models," preferably
students that the ADD child views as "significant others." Encourage
peer tutoring and cooperative collaborative teaching.
Do not place the ADD student near: Air conditioners, heaters, high
traffic areas, doors or windows. Keep the classroom door closed. Keep
the room free of clutter. Distracting posters, signs, and hanging
pictures should relate to the lesson being presented.
ADD children do not handle change very well so avoid: transitions,
changes in schedule, physical relocation, disruptions.
Lesson presentation modifications
Maintain eye contact with the ADD student during verbal instruction.
Make directions clear and concise. Simplify complex directions. Avoid
multiple commands.
Make sure ADD student comprehends directions before beginning a task.
Repeat instructions in a calm, positive manner, if needed. Help ADD
child feel comfortable with seeking assistance.
All children will benefit from receiving an outline of the day's lesson
prior to beginning the lesson. In addition, children may benefit from
the use of colored chalk to emphasize important words or ideas in the
lesson.
Anything that spices up the lesson will be beneficial for children with
ADD, helping them to pay attention. Students could be allowed to make
frequent responses to teacher questions by holding up hand signals or
written signals or by answering in unison. Groups of students could
make up games to teach each other concepts or do role-playing
activities to teach history or social studies topics. Role playing in
mathematics could even be fun.
ADD children often benefit from a required daily assignment notebook.
The teacher can check to make sure the student correctly writes down
all assignments. Then the parents and teachers sign notebook daily to
signify completion of homework assignments. Parents and teachers can
also use the notebook for daily communication.
Worksheet, workbook, and test layout may need to be modified for
children with ADD or visual perceptual problems. It may help to use
large type on clean paper without distracting pictures or excessive
ink. Underlining, highlighting, or drawing boxes around parts of the
ADD child's worksheets may also help. During tests or quizzes, make
sure you are testing knowledge learned and not attention span. Allow
the ADD child to demonstrate mastery of the curriculum by answering
oral questions or demonstrating concepts learned if writing for
extended periods of time is too difficult. ADD children may also
benefit from being given extra time for certain tasks. The ADD student
may work more slowly. Don't penalize for needed extra time.
Behavior management recommendations
Have the class make up the class rules, then post them clearly in the
room. Review the rules frequently early in the year so the children
know them well. It may be fun to have the class act out rule breaking
and rule following to make sure they understand. Try not to leave any
room for interpretation, or the ADD child may try to debate his or her
way out of trouble.
When children break posted classroom rules, remain calm, state
infraction of rule, and don't debate. It is important to have
pre-established consequences for misbehavior. Administer consequences
immediately and monitor proper behavior frequently. Praise specific
behaviors. Avoid non-specific praise statements. Enforce the rules of
the classroom consistently. Avoid "getting personal" with the ADD child
after poor behavior. Avoid ridicule and criticism. Remember, ADD
children have difficulty staying in control. Teach the child to reward
him/herself. Encourage positive "self-talk," i.e., "You did very well
remaining in your seat today. Don't you feel proud!" This encourages
the child to think positively about him/herself.
Implement a behavior management system. Select up to three specific
behaviors which present problems for the ADD student and define
alternative behaviors to be learned. Then develop a system of
monitoring the behaviors and charting improvement. Include the entire
class in your plan. When necessary, sign contracts with ADD children
and their parents to reinforce one to three specific behaviors. It may
be helpful to reward children for improvements. (Example: Goal-Remain
working quietly during independent work for 10 minutes at a time.
Primary behavior-continuing working. Prior to the beginning of
independent work time, the teacher reminds the class to try to be quiet
and work hard during the period of time defined by the teacher. The
teacher looks at ADD child to insure that he/she is listening, then the
teacher praises quiet children throughout the period. The teacher might
split the class into two groups and have a contest to see which group
works quietly.)
"Attention Deficit Disorder: What is ADD?" was written by C.
J. Newton, MA, Learning Specialist and published in the Find
Counseling.com (formerly TherapistFinder.net) Mental Health Journal in
July, 1997. Parts of the article were published at the ADD/LD Resource
Center web site (www.add-ld.com), owned and operated by the Institute
for ADD and Learning, in 1995. C. J. Newton was the co-founder of the
Institute for ADD and Learning, along with Sandra Scheinbaum, Ph.D.
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Gifted
and Talented
Lesson Modifications:
One way teachers can extend or enrich the content they present
is by asking open-ended questions. Such questions stimulate higher
order thinking skills and give students opportunities to consider and
express personal opinions. Open-ended questions require thinking skills
such as comparison, synthesis, insight, judgment, hypothesis,
conjecture, and assimilation. Such questions can also increase student
awareness of current events. Open-ended questions should be included in
both class discussions and assignments. They can also be used as
stimulation for the opening or conclusion of a lesson.
Another strategy for lesson modification developed by Susan Winebrenner
(1992) is to use Bloom’s taxonomy of six levels of thinking to develop
lesson content. Bloom’s model implies that the “lower” levels
(knowledge, comprehension, and application) require more literal and
less complex thinking than the “higher” levels (analysis, evaluation,
and synthesis). Teachers are encouraged to develop thematic units with
activities for students at all ability levels. This strategy involves
four steps. Teachers first choose a theme that can incorporate learning
objectives from several different subject areas. Secondly, teachers
identify 6 to 10 key concepts or instructional objectives. Third, they
determine which learner outcomes or grade-level competencies will be
targeted for the unit. Finally, they design instructional activities to
cover each of the six levels of thinking.
Roets, L. (1993). Modifying standard curriculum for high
ability students. New Sharon, IA: Leadership Publishers.
Winebrenner, S. (1992). Teaching gifted kids in the regular classroom.
Minneapolis, MN: Free Spirit.
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