Accommodations for Written Work

Parents and teachers often say that children with attention and executive functioning challenges struggle to complete written reports and essays.  Students often say they don’t know where to start.  Flexible structuring can help.  In this article, Dr. Davenport suggests a number of accommodations that can help struggling students prepare written essays and reports.

Purpose + Structure = Better Writing

Teaching your student to recognize the purpose and structure of different types of paragraphs can help improve his internal structure for expressing himself in writing. Start with these examples based on his reasons for writing. To Outline the Steps in a Process The process paragraph or sequential paragraph details a series of steps needed to…

Writing Purposeful Paragraphs

Children and teens with attention, language, learning, and executive functioning difficulties often struggle to understand and develop the structure of writing. As a result, it can be hard for them to organize their good ideas into good written paragraphs and reports. Struggling students can benefit from learning how to organize their ideas based on the…

Inferring: Reading Between the Lines

Sometimes an author doesn’t tell you exactly what’s happening, but gives you just enough clues so you can figure it out yourself.   Inferring involves making a logical guess based on facts in the text plus what you already know from life.  Making inferences helps good readers better understand the text. Inferring also builds interest to continue…

Reading to Compare and Contrast

Comparing and contrasting is an important skill. It helps your teen focus on specific similarities and differences in characters in a story or ways of doing things in science. This not only helps with reading comprehension but is an essential skill in writing reports and taking tests in middle school, high school and college.  Try…

One Thing Leads to Another: Reading for Cause and Effect

The idea behind cause and effect can be summed up by the statement “One thing leads to another.” Understanding cause and effect, and the relationship between them, can make your child or teen a better reader. Try these suggestions.

Reading for Details

Details are easy to miss when a student is reading quickly in order to get on to more fun and exciting tasks.  Reading for details often becomes a boring and monotonous task that can make your student tired and less attentive.  Have her try these suggestions to help her focus on and capture the important…

Improving Consistency in the Classroom

One of the most frustrating aspects of attention and executive functioning challenges for teachers is “consistent inconsistency.” Day-to-day, even hour-to-hour, our sustained attention and other  executive skills can vary significantly. Family and educators are reminded that one of the hallmark characteristics of executive functioning problems is the variability of work performance across settings. Students perform more consistently on…

Positive Behavior Management in the Classroom

Difficult classroom behavior is often difficult to manage.  “Behavior” as it is used here includes not only over-activity and impulsiveness, but also distractibility and day-dreaming. For example, embarrassing a day-dreaming child in front of his peers is not positive behavior management.  Consider these alternatives. Structuring Instead of confronting students continually on behaviors that are inappropriate,…

Flexibly Structured Classroom Accommodations

Classroom accommodations are a vital part of the management process for children and teens who struggle with executive functioning problems. Consider using “structured flexibility” with struggling students.  Structuring can assist students in improving their executive functioning weaknesses while the flexibility of accommodations can facilitating success in their academic and personal efforts. Structuring Consider these ways to…

Tips for Dealing with Transitions at School

It is important that your child’s educators are aware of the struggles she has during transitions and non-structured situations.  Communicate her needs clearly, make suggestions based on what works at home and share the ideas outlined in this post.