Celebrating 25 Years

Busy Days Ahead

Teen girl with ADHD reading notebook at high school

Teen girl with ADHD reading notebook at high school

Exhilarating and unnerving, demanding and rewarding. High school is a time of exploring new interests, trying new activities, meeting new people. Each year, teachers will push you farther. You’ll be handed bigger challenges and more responsibility for meeting them.

With the simpler demands of middle school behind you, you’ll need study skills, time-management tools, and organization strategies more than ever.

During these years, you’ll begin to think more abstractly, try on new identities, and question what your place in the world should be. At the same time, making friends and fitting in are top priorities; you’ll need to recognize social nuance and cope with peer pressure. This is a time to truly understand the challenges of ADHD — where it can trip you up, and how you can compensate.

This is also the time to become your own advocate. With your parents’ support, you can be an active participant in getting the help you need. Start by meeting with each of your teachers to explain how you learn best and how they can help you stay focused and organized. When you’re ready, take an active role in your special-ed team meetings to get the accommodations that will allow you to succeed. By the time you leave high school, you should be able to determine when and where you need help, and how to get it.

Academics: Keeping Up, Pulling Ahead

Many high school teachers begin the school year with a lesson on responsibilities — keeping up with classwork, handing in assignments on time, asking for help when needed. The message for students with ADHD or learning disabilities? It’s up to you to engage the strategies that help you learn, focus, and manage your time.

Some of these require the teacher’s approval — sitting up front, away from distractions, for instance. Others involve accommodations outlined in your IEP. For the most part, though, you’re in charge.

What Parents Can Do

During these pivotal four years, expect your teen to be less receptive to your involvement in his schoolwork. This is normal, and you’ll avoid many struggles by accepting it. Right now, it’s more important to keep your relationship strong and the lines of communication open — even if the math make-up doesn’t get handed in. Consider yourself less of a coach and more of a partner, working with your child to achieve school success.

Each year, pull back a bit more. By senior year, your child should be taking the reins — figuring out what she needs, setting priorities, and arranging for the right kind of help.

The Social Scene: Making Friends & Fitting In

Most people who have gone through high school report that getting their social bearings was the hardest part. Entering the fray with ADHD adds to the stress. Even if making friends comes easily, being impulsive, misreading cues, and crossing invisible boundaries can jeopardize your social standing. It’s easy to lose friends or be ostracized if you don’t master the rules of the road.

What Parents Can Do

Teens have reached an age when they can get into real trouble — yet they’re less likely than ever to heed our advice. We can try to point them in the right direction, but it’s not always easy, particularly if they’re not ready to face some of their ADHD challenges. Let your child know you’re in her corner and always available to talk.

Organization: Creating Harmony, Inside and Out

Attention-deficit disorder affects the brain’s executive functions — time management, short-term memory, and organization. In high school, these are the skills you need most to keep up with increasingly complex classes, extracurricular activities, an after-school job, and, if you’re lucky, a thriving social life. To juggle these demands, you must find ways to organize your home and school environments, and prioritize your life.

The following strategies can help you think clearly, become more efficient, and get things done. If you need guidance, consult a coach, mentor, or a professional organizer. As with putting performance tires on your car, you’ll go farther if you start off right.

What Parents Can Do

Your child will probably need help in bringing order to his life. Without criticizing, work with him to set up routines and de-clutter his space, or get him professional help. Keeping the rest of your home in order will set a good example.

Updated on March 31, 2025

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