Students with dyslexia & ADHD in independent and public schools
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Question Five: Executive Function — Landmark College Institute for Research and Teaching

Question Five: Executive Function — Landmark College Institute for Research and Teaching | Students with dyslexia & ADHD in independent and public schools | Scoop.it
I am interested in learning more about developing and implementing effective classroom strategies to support students who have weak executive functions. More specifically, I would like to focus on two specific executive skills: task initiation and working memory. What interventions are recommended when a student (with a 504 Plan based on a diagnosis of ADHD) has good problem solving ability for non-verbal task that is brief and highly structured, but cannot handle a complex task?

How do I help a student who struggles with the ability to hold information in memory while performing complex tasks? Can you provide articles, books and research concerning this issue?

Response: You pose interesting questions about how to manage executive function difficulties in the classroom. We highly recommend 2 books by Lynn Meltzer: Executive Function: Theory to Practice and Promoting Executive Function in the Classroom, which can expand on some brief suggestions based on our own classroom experiences at Landmark College.

For a student who can't handle a complex task despite good general problem-solving ability, we help the student develop the ability to micro-unit a task, that is, to break it down into a series of smaller, manageable steps. The University of Minnesota Libraries has an interactive assignment calculator on their website that helps students do this for long-range assignments. We suggest students enter the steps onto a template that gives check-off boxes for each step, so they can indicate when each step is completed. The template includes a due-date or deadline for each step, with a Plan B box for a back-up date if the first deadline isn't met.

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Children’s Ed. Technology: Partnerships, Products & Prototypes – Post by Julie Brannon |Digital Media Diet

Children’s Ed. Technology: Partnerships, Products & Prototypes – Post by Julie Brannon |Digital Media Diet | Students with dyslexia & ADHD in independent and public schools | Scoop.it

People often disagree about which subjects schools should teach, but nearly everyone agrees that children must learn reading, writing and arithmetic. The United States invests considerable resources in making sure that students are learning these basic subjects, and yet schools still fall behind – especially schools with a higher percentage of lower income children.

 

In a 2010 report called Raising Readers: A Story of Success, published by PBS KIDS in partnership with the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) and funded by the United States Department of Education Ready to Learn grant (RTL), researchers report great success using digital media to teach children literacy skills. It also explains that during fourth grade (ages 9-10 years) schools begin to move from teaching children to “learn to read” to teaching children to “read to learn,” while focusing on additional subjects such as history and science. If children do not learn to read at grade level by this time, they are at a lifetime disadvantage. Researchers are finding that many children are not ready for fourth grade.

 

This lack of readiness has been called the “fourth grade reading slump.” (See Getting Over the Slump, The Joan Ganz Cooney Center at Sesame Workshop, 2008.) The Raising Readers report also states, “Fourth grade literacy rates are directly tied to high school dropout rates, which are the most cited predictors of crime, low income and reliance on social services.” The message is that students must learn these basic skills early and then they must be engaged and motivated to stay in school and continue learning. There is great hope that new programs, along with innovations in technology, can help with both ...


Via Carisa Kluver
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