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Children with ADHD need clear and consistent expectations in order to thrive at school and at home. Expectations provide structure and consistency, and help them strive to reach their full potential. Unfortunately, setting realistic expectations for a child with ADHD is hard! For the most part, the rules and guidance around typical age-appropriate expectations don’t apply.
Developmentally, children and teens with ADHD are generally 2-3 years behind their peers when it comes to social skills and executive functioning skills (the skills needed for impulse control, sustained attention, planning, organization, and time management).
This developmental lag has been identified over and over again in research studies that have used parent and teacher rating scales, past studies that have gathered observations of children’s behavior, and neuroimaging studies that measured brain development in ADHD. So, while you may have a child with ADHD who is intelligent and talented in many ways, the foundational skills that they need in order to reach their full potential are relatively weak.
More often than not, parents, teachers, coaches, and other important adults in a child’s life do not adjust their expectations based on the developmental level of a child with ADHD. As a result, they inadvertently set the child up for failure by holding them to an unreachable standard. As you might expect, in these situations, the child fails to meet expectations, and their self-esteem suffers. Parents will typically become increasingly frustrated with their child, but they will also try to help improve the situation.
Sometimes this help comes in the form of “snowplow” parenting – clearing obstacles out of their child’s way whenever possible and picking up the pieces or making excuses for their child when they fail. This response may help in the short term, but long term, it does nothing to address the root of the problem: the developmental gap between expectations and skills.
To see lasting change, a strategic, three-pronged approach is needed that addresses both the skills side and the expectations side of the problem:
Using homework as an example, your expectation may be that your child completes all of their homework every night, but your child may not have the skills and abilities they need to work independently for 30 or 40 minutes. Rather than have an extreme response (e.g., dropping the expectation altogether or doing your child’s homework for them), try scaffolding by creating a structured homework routine designed to help them work as independently as possible every night. That might mean 15 to 20 minutes of independent work followed by a short break and a second round of independent work time (again of 15 to 20 minutes).
At Huntington, we practice scaffolding on all skill-based learning, so students see progress immediately and feel successful when they complete each exercise. We do this throughout our programs to build skills, confidence, and motivation. These transfer to schoolwork and homework.
At Huntington, we adjust expectations in a child’s program and build skills so they learn to meet the standards that are expected for schoolwork and homework. This builds the child’s confidence and self-esteem knowing that they can complete the work successfully.
Setting clear and reasonable expectations for children with ADHD is essential to helping them reach their full potential and avoiding falling into the snowplow parenting role. Knowing where to set an expectation is hard, and not necessarily something parents should do alone. Reach out to your child’s teacher, therapist, counselor, and/or pediatrician for help.
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