- May often be out of their seat
- Can’t wait their turn
- Doesn’t follow instructions
- Seems disinterested
- Makes careless mistakes
- Gets involved in and interrupts other children’s work
- Gets into trouble constantly in the playground
- Is fidgety and restless
- Doesn’t finish tasks
CLASSROOM MANAGEMENT
Here are some simple strategies for teachers and carers of children with ADHD in a group/classroom situation. Children with ADHD need the following three things, above all else, to cope with classroom life!
They are:
STRUCTURE, STRUCTURE AND MORE STRUCTURE!
From the Beginning
- Always try to sit the student with ADHD in a part of the room with the least amount of distractions – up the front, away from doors and windows, in front of you but don’t stigmatise the student by isolating them
- Clear the desk or work area of all items not needed for the designated task at hand
- Break the task down into steps from start to finish and reward after each stage, no matter how small each stage is
- Allow for physical movement during the steps of completion of task e.g. to go and get the books from the shelf, etc.
- Talk to the student and try to stoop to their level and use eye contact and gestures
- Ascertain that you have the child’s attention when starting to give oral instruction
- Encourage the child to use oral footnoting as he/she repeats the instruction back to you
- Set limits clearly- children with ADHD find it difficult to quantify time, the use of a small visual clock, stopwatch or egg timers are a useful too
- Insist on completion of task
- Find their special or strongest interest and use it to engage the child in other activities e.g.; he/she is good at art- perhaps allow the child to draw what he/she hears in history class
- Keep a routine in the room
- Keep a visual record of Good Behaviour and Good Work. Catch the child being good and reward on a chart
- Praise the student
- Find his/her “Good Time” of the day – perhaps the child is on medication and monitoring is necessary, watch for changes in behaviour throughout the day
- Provide an atmosphere of acceptance
- Use of different colours, graphics and animation for instruction can prove useful
- Uses of computer programmes are also useful ADHD children respond well to them and it encourages them to self-monitor
For older students
- Encourage the student – to write it down, break it down
- Keep a diary or “to do list”
- Encourage colour coding e.g. in the homework journal
- Set up a work station away from the desk
- Use his/her wrist watch as a reminder
- Praise the student
- Say it, write it and repeat it when giving oral instruction
- Monitor skills development and build on it
- Give advance notice of upcoming tasks, e.g. projects and lessons
- Outline what you expect and how you expect it to be completed
- Change your tone of voice and pace – keep them interested
- Encourage them for feed-back to reinforce the given instruction
- Time out breaks
- Seat breaks- allow movement in the room
- Establish a private signal in advance so they know that their behaviour is inappropriate e.g. tapping the desk
- Use positive language e.g. “Doin’ great”, “you’re nearly there”
- Coach the student to completion
- Re-assure
NCSE – National Council for Special Education:
Behaviour Management | National Council for Special Education – CPD and In-School Support (sess.ie)
Department of Education: Guidelines for the use of Reduced School Days in Schools
https://www.gov.ie/en/circular/f49bd-0047-2021