Deliverance from homework help hell is one of the objectives of Dr. Weathers three-day ADHD treatment program in Spokane Washington. treats ADHD children and their family with computer aided emotional restructuring CAER home parent training, behavior modification, homework, desensitization, computer aided emotional restructuring CAER is an effective, drug-free, treatment for

ADHD and Homework

children's homework. This treatment helps

ADHD   

  • help treat the cause of ADHD
  • ADHD children struggle
  • with inattention to homework,
  • and math struggles, improves
  • reading comprehension, and
  • homework help hell

behavior problems.

are eliminated with

CAER Therapy

and treatment . CAER does not use medications for

ADHD  

problems, disorders and symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder ADHD,

school problems and homework problems

and learning disabilities signs and symptom are eliminated with CAER treatment, therapy and help. computer aided emotional restructuring CAER is an effective, drug-free, treatment for homework and

ADHD

symptoms of ADHD children

Deliverance from Homework Help Hell

Steps to solve homework problems

In order to break the destructive cycle of Homework Help Hell(link to 82-10), one has to focus on the emotional dynamics that drive homework difficulties between parents and children rather than on the intellectual content of the homework itself. When this happens there are often dramatic improvements in the apparent academic skills and performance.

Unfortunately, many children experience intense emotional arousal around academic performance, such that  they're not able to demonstrate the skills that they actually have. This causes misdirected efforts by parents to try to increase their child’s academic skills rather than reducing the obstacles to performance of those skills.

Often parents have unsuccessfully tried many traditional approaches to getting homework done, including tutoring, individual assistance by parents, reward and punishment systems, and time out. Because of parents own history of intense emotional involvement in the homework process, staying out of the battle may be very difficult.

I am not suggesting that parents should make homework the child’s responsibility and not put contingencies on homework performance. Reinforcement and punishment contingencies are often essential. What I am suggesting is that if prompting, nagging, anger, reminding or contingencies are used in a way that cause emotional arousal, they are likely to backfire.

In contrast, once the emotions have been extinguished, many children increase several grade levels in reading or math ability in just a few hours, with no specific training in reading or math skills. This is not due to any increase in their actual skills. Rather, it is due to their increased ability to access the skills they already have.

Homework Action plan

It is important to have a quiet place set aside that has a a minimum of distraction, that is used only to complete homework. That reduces the chaos and emotional arousal. The kitchen table is far too much of a family traffic to be useful for homework. Likewise, other distractions such as TV, radio, computers should all be off.

It has to remain the child's homework, not the parent's homework. This is essential because learning a pattern of completing tasks independently and in a quality fashion is more important than whether any one assignment is done. Parents must stay out of the detail of how homework is actually performed. Rather, they need a calm, cool focus and with a minimum of words. The focus needs to be on when, and where the homework is done, as well as on the quality of the completed homework, not your child's effort.
Unfortunately, such strategies can be hard to implement properly because of the history of negative parent and child emotional conflict around homework. And, the “devil is in the details” of how such strategies are implemented. "Almost" or "usually" doing it right seldom works.
 
After a destructive emotional feedback loop between parent and child has been in place for a while, it can be very difficult to stop it without systematically extinguishing the whole emotionally arousing chain of events that drive homework hell. Many times it is necessary to extinguish both the child’s negative emotions toward the home and school work, as well and the negative feelings that both parent and child have toward homework itself.

Article is in the following categories:

>> Family dynamics are part of ADHD
>> Children with ADHD
>> Homework problems and solutions
  • The Conditioned Attentional Avoidance Loop Model hypothesizes that ADHD behavior could be a result of a child's exposure to interpersonal stress before the child is developmentally equipped to handle it. Indeed, attentional avoidance may be the only mechanism for a young child to escape these early stresses, since their physical mobility to escape is restricted and they do not have the verbal or intellectual skills to change the stressor.
    Read more...
  • (Read #24-4 as introduction first) Once an ADHD child is aroused by feelings of anxiety and anger, his ability to learn attentional avoidance increases while his ability to learn math, spelling and the like declines. This happens in a two-stage process.

    First, the child experiences both the discomfort of the emotion as well as its negative effects on his performance. And he is overwhelmed by this experience.

    Second, he learns to escape this noxious experience through attentional avoidance. Although avoidance feels better in the short run, performance at home and school soon deteriorates.

    Read more...
  • In reality, when you see a kid staring at a book, all you really know is that “he is not reading.” There can be many reasons why “he is not…,” only one of which is “He can’t…” Further, “can’t” does not necessarily mean that he has some underlying neurological or intellectual defect, as is usually implied by “he can’t…”

    There is a huge flaw in the “can’t” logic that we need to dissect to understand what is really going on.

    Read more...
  • So, how do so many parents get sucked into Homework Help Hell? The short answer is that children can tap powerful neurological mechanisms to control how parents feel, good or bad. Now to the long answer.

    Read more...
  • The lightning speed of the ADHD child’s emotional responses to instructions often preempts listening to  what a parent or teacher says. The parent says, “Clean up your room.” But before the parent finishes saying the word “clean,” the child is furious and their listening shut down.

    That’s because this interaction has a history. The child has a conditioned emotional response to the parent’s voice, tone and words. That response is to his feelings of anger, rather than his parent’s instruction to clean up his room. Indeed, the response is so strong that the full request is barely, if at all, heard. The child then acts on his feelings of anger, rather than the merits of the parental request.

    Read more...
  • adhd >> Family dynamics are part of ADHD

    In order to break the destructive cycle of Homework Help Hell(link to 82-10), one has to focus on the emotional dynamics that drive homework difficulties between parents and children rather than on the intellectual content of the homework itself. When this happens there are often dramatic improvements in the apparent academic skills and performance.

    Read more...
  • adhd >> Homework problems and solutions

    A conditioned feedback loop between parents and kids causes spiraling emotional intensity. The child becomes upset with homework. This triggers reciprocal emotional intensity in the parent, which in turn triggers more negative feelings in the child. Night after night, the same pattern is repeated and thus the triggers become stronger and stronger. In spite of best efforts, the intense emotions use up all of the child's attentional resources so nothing is left to do the academic work. Often little homework is completed and parents feel helpless, angry and frustrated. It is HHH.

    Read more...
  • adhd >> Homework problems and solutions

    The first step in the process of doing homework, that often leads to Homework Help Hell, is parents trying to find out what the assignment is. To be helpful, a parent has to find out if the child got his work done in class, if incomplete work was sent home and if there is any homework to be done. The battle begins when the child blows through the front door, or climbs into the car.

    Read more...
  • adhd >> Homework problems and solutions

    Homework sessions can take the form of one or both parents sitting down with the child to do their joint homework. Parents may use arguments, reasoning, logic, reminding, threatening, or pleading to push the child through each step. The harder the parent works to help, often the less the child accomplishes.

    Read more...
  • As she reached for the receiver, the only thing she really did not know was whether it was the principal or the teacher once again calling to rant about the carnage that Matt had just unleashed. This time it was Matt's teacher boiling with anger about how he had just called his teacher an "f--king idiot" and refused to sit down or do any work. Being well conditioned by this pattern, Sherry already had her car keys in her hand and was walking with the phone toward her car to go pick Matt up.

    Read more...
  • Being a parent requires that you exercise your adult judgment by asserting control over your child. This is unavoidable. The only question is how you will do this and with what success.

    Read more...
  • Children hear stories from their families about who they are. These stories may be positive or negative. Children diagnosed with ADHD, LD or HFA(high functioning Asperger's) hear many stories that reinforce these labels. These stories may be about his problems, diagnosis, disabilities, conflicts, and failures. They also might be telling jokes about his clumsiness, criticizing him for not getting his homework done, or on the positive side, applauding his getting a good grade on a test, or praising his athletic ability.

    Read more...
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Deliverance from Homework Help Hell