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9 Clever Teaching Strategies for Common Learning Hurdles

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Executive function (EF) deficits are commonly mistaken for — and exacerbated by — ADHD symptoms. The reverse is also true, making EF and ADHD inextricably linked yet also distinct.

To address a student’s challenges with reading comprehension and other academic skills, teachers and parents must first understand their origins. For example, disorganization may be a manifestation of core ADHD symptoms like hyperactivity and inattention. On the flip side, physical fidgeting may be a sign of overwhelm in a student struggling to break apart and solve a problem due to weak EF.

Whether executive dysfunction or ADHD or both exists at the core, educators and parents should follow these 3 steps to help a student build skills and confidence in middle and high school:

  1. Create learning environments that lessen the impact of deficits.
  2. Modify assignments to minimize the impact of weaknesses.
  3. Teach skills that relate to the specific assignment and minimize the impact of deficits.

Following are three common challenges faced by adolescents with ADHD, and example solutions to build each academic skill:

[Get This Free Download: The Teacher’s Guide to Common Learning Challenges]

Academic Skill: Reading Comprehension

The problem: The student reads a chapter of a history book but can’t stay focused on the content and can’t answer any of the comprehension questions at the end. In this case, ADHD inattention causes or worsens EF difficulties with memory and organization of thoughts.

Reading Comprehension: EF Solutions

Academic Skill: Writing Essays

The problem: A student turns in an accurate essay that’s fairly well written, but it rambles and misses the central theme. She thinks she’s covered the material and gets upset and frustrated when an evaluation suggests otherwise. Motivation decreases, resistance increases.

Writing Essays: EF Solutions

[Read: Writing Essays Like a Big Screen Pro]

Academic Skill: Math

The problem: The student “runs out of steam” after doing a few math problems, and then starts making careless errors, complaining, and getting disruptive — all signs of cognitive overload related to poor EF skills.

Math Burnout: EF Solutions

Building Reading Comprehension & Academic Skills: Next Steps

Schoolhouse Blocks: Foundational Executive Functions

Access more resources from ADDitude’s Schoolhouse Blocks: Foundational Executive Functions series exploring common learning challenges and strategies to sharpen core EFs at school.


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Updated on April 30, 2022

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