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Finding Success With Learning Disabilities

Oct 30, 2014

According to the National Center for Learning Disabilities, currently 2.4 million students are diagnosed with a learning disability and receive special education services in school each year. Learning disabilities can become very frustrating for children and their parents as they try to support them. As part of Learning Disability Awareness Month, Kids In The House experts share important insights on aiding children with learning disabilities to succeed by reminding them to remain patient in their studies and by helping them gain a better understanding of their disability.

Neuropsychologist Dr. Jerry Schultz is on the faculty of the Harvard Medical School in the Department of Psychiatry and is the Chair of the Professional Advisory Board of the Learning Disabilities Association of America. Dr. Schultz has created an eight-step model to help children with learning disabilities avoid stress. The model is explained below, using the DE-STRESS acronym:

Define: Decide on a diagnosis for the child.
Educate: Educate the child about his or her condition.
Speculate: Sit down with the child and discuss their learning.
Teach: Show the child the skills that he or she needs to be successful.
Reduce: Limit any deterrents to your child’s learning.
Exercise: Keep your child active to help their brain be more efficient.
Success: Build a sense of confidence within your child.
Strategize: Help your child plan to use the skills they have learned.

One of the hardest steps of this model is educating a child about his/her disability. Psychiatrist Dr. Ned Hallowell explains how important it is to talk to children in a way they will understand. Dr. Hallowell specifically works with children struggling with ADHD and explains their diagnosis by saying they have a “Ferrari engine for a brain” but with “bicycle breaks” for stopping. He says he is a “break specialist” who will help them strengthen their breaks throughout the years. In the end, instead of saying, “I have some deficit disorder that needs to get treated,” the child will say, “I’ve got a race car brain and I need to strengthen my breaks, so I can be a champion.”

Clinical psychologist Karen Schiltz echoes both Dr. Schultz and Hallowell in explaining how important it is to see beyond the label of a learning disability. By showing kids their strengths and building their confidence, you will enable them to truly understand how they can succeed. She explains that while “labels are important and do help us understand the child… we all look at what’s underneath the label to really help your child.”

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