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The Power of Role-Play for Building Social Skills

Role play is a great way for ADHDers to work on their communication skills

Making eye contact. Not interrupting. Taking turns. If your child with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) needs help with these and other social skills, you may want to give “role-playing” a try. By testing out various personas, he can see how simple changes in what he says and does can help him get along better with friends and family members.

Role-playing works with almost any child who is old enough to talk. It’s especially good for teaching children how to deal with teasing — a problem familiar to many kids with ADHD.

Consider the case of Joe B., a nine-year-old I recently treated. Joe’s parents sought my help because he kept overreacting to playful (but sometimes hurtful) verbal banter that came his way during recess. On one such occasion, after Joe did something silly, a playmate laughed at him and called him a “turkey head.” Enraged, Joe shoved the boy and burst into tears. He looked like a crybaby.

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Joe acknowledged shoving the other boy, but said to me, “He started it.” Joe felt it was the other boy who needed to change. I explained to Joe that he couldn’t always control what other people did, but that he always had a choice about how to react. “You’re the boss of yourself,” I told him.

Talking things over made Joe feel better, and I decided that role-playing might help Joe avoid future incidents. Here are the basic steps I used with Joe that you might try with your own child:

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Role-playing didn’t help Joe right away. But one day, a few weeks after we began our sessions, Joe was beaming when he came into my office. Once again, a playmate had teased him, but this time Joe hadn’t struck back. “I told him I didn’t care what he thought,” Joe explained.

Over time, as we continued our sessions, Joe got even better at controlling his behavior on the playground. Other children accepted him as one of the gang, and that made him feel good about himself.

Theater Classes Can Help

Taking theater in school, or taking a class given by a community theater, can prove useful for awkward kids. Kids who participate in theater get practice waiting their turn (to say their lines, for example). And they see other kids interacting with one another, in real life as well as in the world of make-believe. Learning a role in a play reinforces the notion that each of us has some choice regarding the roles we play in life. A child who is timid, for instance, can pretend to be self-confident — and that can help him become self-confident.

Read This Next: How and Why ADHD Triggers Intense Feelings

Updated on January 23, 2020

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