Edge Foundation Blog

Archive for April, 2009

Edge Foundation featured in 2009 ADHD Family Summit

Edge Foundation is joining other leading experts during the months of May and June for the 2009 ADHD Family Summit. This free event is being organized by Rory Stern, a passionate advocate in the ADHD community. The tele-seminars will be held Monday and Wednesday evenings at 9:00 pm Eastern (8:00 Central, 7:00 Mountain, and 6:00 Pacific), and includes access to a 24-hour replay line for people who aren’t able to listen in live.

Topics include understanding the ADHD brain, giftedness and ADHD, supporting family members when they need it, working memory, attention master and more. Edge Foundation’s Neil Peterson and Sarah Wright will be presenting Coaching for Teens – The Power to Succeed Academically, Socially, and in Life. Neil’s personal story and Sarah’s experience will be simply one call NOT to miss!  The date of the Edge Foundation presentations are still being finalized, but if you sign up for the series, you’ll be sure to get the news!

While this series officially kicks off on Monday night, May 4th at 9 PM EDT,  a special pre-series call has been scheduled for this coming tomorrow night, Wednesday, April 29th.

One of the biggest for people with ADHD is time management strategies.  Tomorrow night we’ll be talking time management strategies with a very special guest on the topic.  Sign up today to get the details on how to listen in on this exciting pre-Summit interview.

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Edge in the News & For Parents & For Students & For Teachers Edge Foundation 28 Apr 2009 No Comments

Fidgeting helps ADHD people stay focused

Ever tried to do two or more things at once?  Like doing homeworkand listening to your music?  Or listening to a talk and doodling your notes?  Did it work for you?

Those secondary “mindless” tasks (the doodling and the listening to the music) are what the Edge Foundation’s Executive Director, Sarah Wright, calls fidgeting.

A bored ADHD brain is a sluggish brain

“Everyone thinks of fidgeting as those restless movements we do when we’re bored, but really it’s more than that,” she explains.  “One of the things we know about an ADHD brain is that when it gets bored, it gets sluggish.  Literally.  In brain scans of people with ADHD doing boring repetitive tasks, we can see that pretty quickly the pre frontal cortex slows down.  One of the reasons stimulant medications are thought to work for ADHD is that they correct for this.  When compared to the general population, it is pretty clear people with ADHD just require a higher base level of stimulation to stay comfortably alert and focused.”

Fidgeting helps people with ADHD stay focused

Fidget to Focus is the book Sarah co-authored with Dr. Roland Rotz.  They make the case that instead of being a distraction, certain mindless tasks-like listening to music or doodling on paper or chewing gum or standing up at your desk-are really ways to help self-regulate and stay focused. Fidget to Focus was just featured in ADDitude magazine online.

She explains, “All adults self-regulate with sensory-motor activities.  When we get tired of sitting at our desks, we get up for a cup of coffee.  We switch on the radio in the car to keep us interested while driving.  We maybe splash some cold water on our faces to perk up.  Even as adults we need the right balance of sensory-motor stimulation to keep us in our comfort zone.

“Kids need more.  They need more frequent, more intense, and more variety of sensory-motor stimulation than adults does to stay in their comfort zone.  If you try to take those stimulating things away, they’ll just find something else.  And this is true for all kids, not just those with ADHD.  But because of the way the ADHD brain works, people with ADHD will essentially always need more stimulation than those without ADHD. It’s just a matter of degree.”

Three tips for self-regulating with fidgeting:

Sarah and her co-author emphasize three important points in Fidgeting to Focus that you can start using today.

1.       The great thing about fidgeting is that it’s perfectly natural.  Everyone does it.  The trick is to do it intentionally.  If you do it right, you can manage your ADHD symptoms in a way that’s totally unnoticeable to everyone else.

2.       It’s important to fidget respectfully: doing it in a way that works for you but that doesn’t bother the people around you.  For example, clicking your pen repeatedly during a meeting might not be so cool, but fiddling with a paperclip under the table would be soundless and invisible.

3.       It’s important to realize that a good fidget shouldn’t compete with the primary tasks.  For instance, if you need your eyes for reading, listening to music will be a better fidget than watching the TV.  If you need to listen, doodling or pacing will be a better fidget than being plugged into your iPod.

And ADHD coach can help you figure out which fidget help you focus, and which ones are getting in  your way.  We’d love to hear from you.  What fidget works for you?

Editor’s Note:

University of Central Florida study confirms fidgeting helps kids with ADHD concentrate as reported in the Orlando Sentinal, May 25, 2009.

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For Parents & For Students & For Teachers & How To's and Tips admin 24 Apr 2009 No Comments

Nuturing Safe Teen Drivers

Continuing our series on safe teen driving (see teen driving risk and safe driving book review), we offer some high tech (and low tech) tools to help your teen become a safer driver.

Low Tech Resource to support safe teen driving

Have you driver complete the Safe Driving Pledge.  It’s a great way to open up discussion about what skills make for a safe driver and to clarify your expectations for your teen’s driving behavior.  Cost:  Free

High Tech Teen Driver Safety Hardware

DriverZed

DriverZed program from AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety is an interactive computer program that trains young drivers to identify and deal with both common and unusual traffic situations before they get on the road.  Cost $24.95.

We know one youth who tried it really liked it.  His family reports he did it once all the way through and made all sorts of mistakes.  Then he did it again and did it perfectly.  He was proud to have mastered it and talked about all the things he’d learned (and then had fun correcting his parents on their driving mistakes on one or two occasions!)

Drivecam

The Drivecam is a tool you install on the review mirror of your car.  It records a video of your teen while they are behind the wheel.  The Drivecam gives your teen a sense of accountability – even when you aren’t in the car with them.  And when a driving error serious enough to trigger the recording (a sharp change in speed or direction) happens, the data are there for later evaluation and learning.

This program isn’t cheap.  But it’s been proven to be so effective that customers of American Family insurance can get the service for free at www.teensafedriver.com.  Cost: $899 for first year, $30/month after that.  See website for complete package details.

GPS Tracker

You may also want to consider a GPS Tracker that tells you where the car is at any given time.  http://www.rmtracking.com/teentracking.html

CarChip

A CarChip a small unit that plugs into your car’s on-board diagnostics and reads and stores driving and engine performance (available at many locations.  You can read a review this product in the Washington Post.

What have you done to help your teen become a safer driver?  We’d love to hear from you.


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For Parents admin 13 Apr 2009 No Comments

ADHD Moment: Spring break blues

Dear Coach,
“Help!  I just got back from Spring Break and my project is due – I forgot all about it!”
Signed,  Cringing

Dear Cringing,

Well, hope you were having fun on Spring Break at least, because the time between now and when that project is due isn’t going to be any fun at all. You are just going to have to buckle down, put aside every extraneous activity, and just do it.

How an ADHD Coach can help

The issue here is not how can a coach help you deal with an emergency – like forgetting all about a major project until just before it’s due.  It is how a coach can help you avoid ending up in emergency situations in the first place. Wouldn’t that be nice!

One of the characteristics of ADHD is a tendency to shoot from the hip, or the “ready, fire, aim” syndrome. A coach works with you over time to develop better planning and self-management skills; skills that will help you manage your time and your things so you’re on top of your work and the rest of your life and not overwhelmed and behind all the time.

Getting back on track:

That being said, if you find yourself in a time pinch and are feeling overwhelmed, try this:

Assess your time:

  • Get two 8.5×11 pieces of paper.
  • Use the first page to sketch out a calendar for the upcoming days: columns for the days and rows for the hours. Mark them appropriately.
  • Block out on your calendar plan all your classes and other necessary time commitments.
  • Block out when you’ll be sleeping and eating.
  • On the second page, list all the other things you have to get done.

Prioritize:

  • Give the things that have big consequences for not getting them done the higher priority. Give the other things lower priority. You can even let them fall off the list for now.
  • Break your project into smaller bits:
  • Divide up the time that’s left on your calendar for the high priority things on your list. For a paper, for instance, block off a portion of the time to do/finish the research, a portion of the time to brainstorm and/or write a draft, and a portion of the time to produce the final draft and hand it in.
  • If it looks like you have extra hours left on your calendar plan, look to the next higher priority tasks and start scheduling them until you run out of hours in the day.

Stick to your plan!

  • Keep the plan with you 24/7. Put it in your agenda, or your flip phone.
  • Keep checking your plan.  Stick to it to the best of your ability. If it’s 1:00 pm and your plan says you should be done with lunch and working on the draft, go work on the draft. Remember, it is an emergency plan to get you through a tough spot. One way or another, it will be over soon.

Then sign up for an Edge Coach

Once you’ve met your deadline, get yourself a coach. Your coach will help you plan better so that next time you won’t get into this pickle. By working with a coach, you can stay on top of your work and have fun too!

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Ask the Coach & For Students admin 08 Apr 2009 1 Comment