Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
ATTENTION DEFICIT
HYPERACTIVITY DISORDER:
INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES AND PRACTICES
2006
Teaching Children with
Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder:
Instructional Strategies and Practices
2006
This report was produced under U.S. Department of Education Contract No. HS97017002 with the American Institutes for
Research. Kelly Henderson served as technical representative for this project.
This report is in the public domain. Authorization to reproduce it in whole or in part is granted. While permission to
reprint this publication is not necessary, the citation should be: U.S. Department of Education, Office of Special Education
and Rehabilitative Services, Office of Special Education Programs, Teaching Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices. Washington, D.C., 2006.
write to: ED Pubs, Education Publications Center, U.S. Department of Education, P.O. Box 1398, Jessup, MD 20794-1398;
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Contents
Introduction....................................................................................................................................................1
Identifying Children With ADHD ............................................................................................................1
An Overall Strategy for the Successful Instruction of Children With ADHD...........................................3
How to Implement the Strategy: Three Components of Successful Programs for
Children With ADHD ................................................................................................................................4
Academic Instruction ..........................................................................................................................4
Introducing Lessons ......................................................................................................................5
Conducting Lessons ......................................................................................................................6
Concluding Lessons ......................................................................................................................8
Individualizing Instructional Practices ..........................................................................................9
Organizational and Study Skills Useful for Academic Instruction of
Children With ADHD...............................................................................................................14
Behavioral Interventions ...................................................................................................................16
Effective Behavioral Intervention Techniques ............................................................................17
Classroom Accommodations.............................................................................................................22
Special Classroom Seating Arrangements for ADHD Students...................................................22
Instructional Tools and the Physical Learning Environment .......................................................22
Conclusion ...................................................................................................................................................23
References....................................................................................................................................................25
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices iii
iv Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity
Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 1
by behaviors exhibited. Individuals with ADHD exhibit
combinations of the following behaviors:
2 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
has been documented that approximately a quarter to one-third
of all children with ADHD also have learning disabilities
(Forness & Kavale, 2001; Robelia, 1997; Schiller, 1996), with
studies finding populations where the comorbidity ranges
from 7 to 92 percent (DuPaul & Stoner, 1994; Osman, 2000).
Likewise, children with ADHD have coexisting psychiatric
disorders at a much higher rate. Across studies, the rate of
conduct or oppositional defiant disorders varied from 43 to 93
percent and anxiety or mood disorders from 13 to 51 percent
(Burt, Krueger, McGue, & Iacono, 2001; Forness, Kavale, &
San Miguel, 1998; Jensen, Martin, & Cantwell, 1997; Jensen,
Shertvette, Zenakis, & Ritchters, 1993). National data on
children who receive special education confirm this co-
morbidity with other identified disabilities. Among parents of
children age 6–13 years who have an emotional disturbance,
65 percent report their children also have ADHD. Parents of
28 percent of children with learning disabilities report their
children also have ADHD (Wagner & Blackorby, 2002).
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 3
children’s strengths and enable instruction to build on their
existing abilities. The settings and contexts in which
challenging behaviors occur should be considered in the
evaluation.
4 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
discussion and techniques that follow pertain to the
instructional process in general (across subject areas);
strategies for specific subject areas appear in the subsequent
subsection “Individualizing Instructional Practices.”
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 5
▪ Simplify instructions, choices, and scheduling. The
simpler the expectations communicated to an ADHD
student, the more likely it is that he or she will comprehend
and complete them in a timely and productive manner.
6 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
or calling on another student. Ask followup questions that
give children an opportunity to demonstrate what they know.
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 7
▪ Highlight key points. Highlight key words in the instructions
on worksheets to help the child with ADHD focus on the
directions. Prepare the worksheet before the lesson begins, or
underline key words as you and the child read the directions
together. When reading, show children how to identify and
highlight a key sentence, or have them write it on a separate
piece of paper, before asking for a summary of the entire
book. In math, show children how to underline the important
facts and operations; in “Mary has two apples, and John has
three,” underline “two,” “and,” and “three.”
8 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
• Preview the next lesson. Instruct students on how to begin
preparing for the next lesson. For example, inform children
that they need to put away their textbooks and come to the
front of the room for a large-group spelling lesson.
In addition to the general strategies listed above for introducing,
Individualizing Instructional conducting, and concluding their lessons, effective teachers of
Practices students with ADHD also individualize their instructional practices in
accordance with different academic subjects and the needs of their
students within each area. This is because children with ADHD have
different ways of learning and retaining information, not all of which
involve traditional reading and listening. Effective teachers first
identify areas in which each child requires extra assistance and then
use special strategies to provide structured opportunities for the child
to review and master an academic lesson that was previously
presented to the entire class. Strategies that may help facilitate this
goal include the following (grouped by subject area):
Language Arts and Reading Comprehension
To help children with ADHD who are poor readers improve
their reading comprehension skills, try the following
instructional practices:
▪ Silent reading time. Establish a fixed time each day for
silent reading (e.g., D.E.A.R.: Drop Everything and Read
and Sustained Silent Reading [Manzo & Zehr, 1998 and
Holt & O’Tuel, 1989]).
▪ Follow-along reading. Ask the child to read a story silently
while listening to other students or the teacher read the story
aloud to the entire class.
▪ Partner reading activities. Pair the child with ADHD with
another student partner who is a strong reader. The partners
take turns reading orally and listening to each other.
▪ Storyboards. Ask the child to make storyboards that
illustrate the sequence of main events in a story.
▪ Storytelling. Schedule storytelling sessions where the child
can retell a story that he or she has read recently.
▪ Playacting. Schedule playacting sessions where the child
can role-play different characters in a favorite story.
▪ Word bank. Keep a word bank or dictionary of new or
“hard-to-read” sight-vocabulary words.
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 9
▪ Board games for reading comprehension. Play board
games that provide practice with target reading-
comprehension skills or sight-vocabulary words.
▪ Computer games for reading comprehension. Schedule
computer time for the child to have drill-and-practice with
sight vocabulary words.
▪ Recorded books. These materials, available from many
libraries, can stimulate interest in traditional reading and can
be used to reinforce and complement reading lessons.
▪ “Backup” materials for home use. Make available to students a
second set of books and materials that they can use at home.
▪ Summary materials. Allow and encourage students to use
published book summaries, synopses, and digests of major
reading assignments to review (not replace) reading assignments.
Phonics
To help children with ADHD master rules of phonics, the
following are effective:
▪ Mnemonics for phonics. Teach the child mnemonics that
provide reminders about hard-to-learn phonics rules (e.g.,
“when two vowels go walking, the first does the talking”)
(Scruggs & Mastropieri, 2000).
▪ Word families. Teach the child to recognize and read word
families that illustrate particular phonetic concepts (e.g.,
“ph” sounds, “at-bat-cat”).
▪ Board games for phonics. Have students play board games,
such as bingo, that allow them to practice phonetically
irregular words.
▪ Computer games for phonics. Use a computer to provide
opportunities for students to drill and practice with phonics
or grammar lessons.
▪ Picture-letter charts. Use these for children who know
sounds but do not know the letters that go with them.
Writing
In composing stories or other writing assignments, children
with ADHD benefit from the following practices:
▪ Standards for writing assignments. Identify and teach the
child classroom standards for acceptable written work, such
as format and style.
10 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
▪ Recognizing parts of a story. Teach the student how to
describe the major parts of a story (e.g., plot, main
characters, setting, conflict, and resolution). Use a
storyboard with parts listed for this purpose.
Spelling
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 11
▪ Manipulatives. Use cutout letters or other manipulatives to
spell out hard-to-learn words.
▪ Special writing paper. Ask the child to use special paper with
vertical lines to learn to space letters and words on a page.
12 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
▪ Partnering for math activities. Pair a child with ADHD
with another student and provide opportunities for the
partners to quiz each other about basic computation skills.
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 13
words such as “sum,” “total,” or “all together” may indicate
an addition operation.
14 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
▪ Assignment notebooks. Provide the child with an assignment
notebook to help organize homework and other seatwork.
▪ Clean out desks and book bags. Ask the child to periodically
sort through and clean out his or her desk, book bag, and other
special places where written assignments are stored.
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 15
▪ Adapt worksheets. Teach a child how to adapt instructional
worksheets. For example, help a child fold his or her reading
worksheet to reveal only one question at a time. The child
can also use a blank piece of paper to cover the other
questions on the page.
16 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
younger children, children with ADHD often act immaturely
and have difficulty learning how to control their impulsiveness
and hyperactivity. They may have problems forming friendships
with other children in the class and may have difficulty thinking
through the social consequences of their actions.
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 17
▪ Be consistent and sincere with praise. Appropriate behavior
should receive consistent praise. Consistency among teachers
with respect to desired behavior is important in order to avoid
confusion on the part of students with ADHD. Similarly,
students will notice when teachers give insincere praise, and
this insincerity will make praise less effective.
18 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
▪ Activity reinforcement. Students receive activity
reinforcement when they are encouraged to perform a less
desirable behavior before a preferred one.
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 19
In some instances, children with ADHD benefit from instruction
designed to help students learn how to manage their own
behavior:
20 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
Using this method, schools, families, and communities work
to design effective environments to improve behavior. The
goal of PBIS is to eliminate problem behavior, to replace it
with more appropriate behavior, and to increase a person’s
skills and opportunities for an enhanced quality of life
(Todd, Horner, Sugai, & Sprague, 1999).
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 21
one point and receives no points if ratings are more than one
point apart; points are exchanged for privileges. With time,
the teacher involvement is removed, and the student
becomes responsible for self-monitoring (DuPaul & Stoner
as cited in Shinn, Walker, & Stoner, 2002).
▪ Seat the child near the teacher. Assign the child a seat near
your desk or the front of the room. This seating assignment
provides opportunities for you to monitor and reinforce the
child’s on-task behavior.
▪ Seat the child near a student role model. Assign the child
a seat near a student role model. This seat arrangement
provides opportunity for children to work cooperatively and
to learn from their peers in the class.
22 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
child with a bookmark to help him or her follow along when
students are taking turns reading aloud.
▪ Egg timers. Note for the children the time at which the
lesson is starting and the time at which it will conclude. Set
a timer to indicate to children how much time remains in the
lesson and place the timer at the front of the classroom; the
children can check the timer to see how much time remains.
Interim prompts can be used as well. For instance, children
can monitor their own progress during a 30-minute lesson if
the timer is set for 10 minutes three times.
Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices 23
ADHD. The first is Identifying and Treating Attention Deficit
Hyperactivity Disorder: A Resource for School and Home.
Coming soon is A Resource Directory for ADHD. Teachers
and others are encouraged to consult these publications and to
use them in conjunction with Teaching Children with
Attention Deficit Disorders: Instructional Strategies and
Practices. As the documents become available, they will be
listed on the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative
Services/Office of Special Education Programs Web site
(http://www.ed.gov/about/ offices/list/osers/osep/index.html).
24 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
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2 Teaching Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder: Instructional Strategies and Practices
U.S. Office of Special
Education Programs