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strategies
Books that contain additional practical strategies are:
The Explosive Child
Ross W. Greene
HarperCollins Publishers, Inc., NY, 1998
A Mind of Its Own: Tourette’s Syndrome, Ruth Dowling Bruun
Oxford University Press, NY, 1994
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You will need a team to determine the best needs for your child. Here are some strategies and guidelines for getting started.
There are many free resources available on our Website:
- Teach organizational skills; keep daily activity supplies in a designated place; make a list and check off each item as it is completed. Try a schoolwork communication folder, with or without communication cards.
- Make a space with few distractions; remove things that draw attention away from the task. Some children might respond well to a study tent.
- Use pictures to make expectations clear, especially for young children. For example, if it's hard to get out of the house in the morning, use a sequence of pictures that can be checked off as they are completed to help keep a child organized.
- Prepare for transitions. For transitions between work activities, use a work system. for transitions between activities, try larger schedules. For example, young children may be less impatient if they have a clear understanding of what their day will be like. The same strategies are useful with older children and adults - just replace pictures with written descriptions.
- Break up tasks into small segments; give directions for each segment separately.
- Increase structure during learning tasks. Activities from the Home Teaching Kit might also be helpful.
- Reward completion of small tasks; provide personalized rewards.Use forms for sticker charts to make the rewards concrete and enhance their effectiveness. Older children may be able to use more complicated reward systems, like working toward a large reward for successful completion of a task or chore five days out of seven.
- Schedule times for physical activity; take breaks throughout a long or tedious task.
- Teach social skills to improve peer relationships and reciprocal work and play. One aspect of this is learning to respond appropriately to facial expressions.
- Use games like Math Mahjong to reinforce math skills and Printable Math Grids to help keep things orderly.
- Please check our list of all resources at Site Map to see if there are other items that can help your child.
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