Frequently Waged Battles and Some Ideas Getting Ready in the Morning/Getting Ready for Bedtime

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Frequently Waged Battles and Some Ideas Getting Ready in the Morning/Getting Ready for Bedtime Executive Skills: Initiation, sustained attention, working memory 1. Collaborate with your child, coming up with a list of things to be done before leaving for school in the morning. 2. Decide together the order in which tasks should be completed 3. For verbal children: a. Turn into a checklist and attach them to a clipboard For younger or more visual children: a. Create a visual schedule using clip art or actual pictures. For example, use pictures chosen to represent different activities and attach them to a clothes pin. Hang the clothes pins on a rope or string in a high profile part of the house in the order in which the tasks are to be completed. 4. Talk through with your child how the process will work from the moment they first get up. Explain that for a few weeks, you will help cue the child to check off each task as they complete it. 5. Rehearse or role-play the process until your child understands how it will work. 6. Determine when the tasks need to be completed to make it to school or the bus on time. 7. Put the system to work. Praise the child for each step completed, and cue for the next step. 8. Once the process is internalized, they should be able to complete the routine independently and within the time constraints. Eventually fade out the checklist or visual prompts. Modifications and Adjustments 1. If needed, add a reinforcer for completing the process on time or with minimal reminders. You may also give the child a point for each step in the process completed with minimal reminders. 2. Set a kitchen timer at the beginning of each step and challenge the child to complete the step before the timer rings. 3. Adjust the time and schedule as needed (e.g., see if there are items on the list that can be done the night before or dropped from the list) 4. Instead of a checklist, write each task on a separate index card and have the child hand in the card and get a new one as each step is completed 5. For young children, make the list shorter, and expect to continue cueing.

Bedroom Cleaning Executive skills addressed: organization, task initiation, sustained attention, working memory 1. Sit down with your child and make a list of the steps involved in cleaning his or her room (example: put dirty clothes in laundry, put clean clothes in dresser, put toys away on toy shelves or in bins, put books on bookshelf, clean off desk surface, throw away trash). 2. Turn the list into a checklist or visual cue system (see Getting Ready in the Morning ), 3. Decide when the chore will be done. 4. Decide what kinds of cues and reminders the child will get before and during the task. 5. Decide how much help the child will get in the beginning, with the long term goal being that the child will clean their room independently. 6. Decide how the quality of the task will be judged. 7. Put the routine in place with agreed upon cues, reminders, and help. 1. Add a reinforcer if needed. This could either be giving the child something to look forward to doing when the chore is completed, or giving the child points for completing each step. 2. If even with your constant presence, cueing, and praise, the child cannot follow the routine, begin by working alongside your child, sharing each task. 3. If even that is too much, consider using a backward chaining approach. You clean the entire room except for one small piece and have the child do that piece with supervision and praise. Gradually add in more pieces for the child to do until the child is doing the entire job. 4. Make the room easier to clean-use storage bins that the child can dump toys into and label each bin. 5. Take a photograph of what a clean room looks like, so when your child completes the task, you can ask him or her to rate his or her performance by comparing their work to the photo. 6. For younger children, use pictures of each step rather than words. Reduce the number of steps, and expect that the child will need help.

Putting Things Away Executive skills: Organization, task initiation, sustained attention, working memory 1. With your child, make a list of the items your child routinely leaves out of place around the house. 2. Identify the proper location for each item. 3. Decide when the item will be put away (example: as soon as I get home from school, as soon as I finish my homework). 4. Decide on a rule for reminders (example, how many reminders are allowed before a penalty is imposed). 5. Decide where the checklist will be kept. 1. Add an incentive if needed. One way to do this would be to place a set number of tokens in a jar each day and withdraw a token each time the child fails to put away an item on time. Tokens can be traded in for small tangible or activity rewards. 2. If remembering to put items away at different times during the day is too difficulty, arrange for a daily pick-up time when all belongings need to be returned to their appropriate locations. 3. For younger children, use pictures, keep the list short, and assume the child will need cues and help for a longer period of time.

Homework Executive skills addressed: Task initiation, sustained attention, planning, time management, metacognition 1. Explain to your child that making a plan for homework is a good way to learn how to make plans and schedules. Establish that when your child gets home from school, before doing anything else, they will make a homework plan using the form that you will provide. 2. The steps the child should follow: a. Write down all assignments b. Make sure they have all the materials the need for each assignment c. Determine whether they need help completing the assignment and who will help them d. Estimate how long each assignment will take e. Write down when he or she will start the assignment f. Show the plan to you so you can help make adjustments as needed 3. Cue your child to start homework at the time listed in the plan. 4. Monitor your child s performance throughout. Depending on the child, this may mean staying with them from start to finish, or checking up on them periodically. 1. If your child resists writing the plan, you do the writing but have the child tell you what to write. 2. If your child tends to forget assignments, modify the planner to list every possible subject and talk about each subject with your child to jog their memory. 3. Create a separate calendar for long-term projects so that your child can keep track of the work that needs to be done. 4. Build in rewards for starting/ending homework on time or for remembering to do it without reminders. 5. For younger children, simply establishing a set time and place to do homework may be enough. Asking them to estimate how long it will take to do each assignment may help them develop their time management skills. Reward them for estimating their times correctly.

Studying for Tests Executive skills addressed: Task initiation, sustained attention, planning, time management, metacognition. 1. Keep a monthly calendar with your child on which any upcoming tests are written. 2. From 5 days to a week before the test, make a study plan. 3. Using the Menu of Study Strategies, have your child decide which strategies they want to use to study of the test. 4. Have your child make a plan for studying that starts 4 days before the test. Psychological research shows that when new material is learned, distributed practice is far more effective than massed practice. In other words, if you plan to spend 2 hours studying for a test, it is better to break the time down into smaller segments. 5. For children who have problems with sustained attention, using several strategies each for a short amount of time may be easier than using one strategy for the full period. You can set a kitchen timer for the length of time for each strategy, and when the bell rings, your child can move to the next. Modification/Adjustments 1. After your child takes the test or after the graded test is returned, ask your child to evaluate how the study plan went. Which strategies seemed to work the best? Which ones were less helpful? 2. If your child felt he or she studied adequately, but still did poorly, check with his or her teacher for feedback about what might have been done differently. Did your child study the wrong material, or in the wrong way? Add an incentive system rewards for good grades on tests.

Learning to Manage Tasks That Take Lots of Effort Executive Skills addressed: Task initiation, sustained attention, planning, time management, metacognition 1. Break the task down into very small parts, so that each part requires no more than 5 minutes. Allow your child to earn a small reward at the end of each part. 2. Allow your child to decide how to break down the task. Make a list of homework activities or chores and let your child decide how much of each task will be done before he or she earns a break. 3. Give your child something powerful to look forward to doing when the task is done. For instance, your child might earn 45 minutes to play a video game for completing his nightly homework (and/or chores), without complaining, within a specific time frame. 4. Reward for being willing to tackle tasks that demand effort. Draw up a chore list and have your child rate each chore for effort required. Then you could assign a larger reward for choosing to do the harder chore. It may be helpful to create a scale for effort, with 1 for easiest and 10 for hardest. Once the scale is in place, you can approach working on ways of making high-effort tasks into a lower effort task (example: change vacuuming for 10 minutes rated an 8 into vacuuming twice for 5 minutes rated a 3). 1. If your child is not successful under this plan, try background chaining (see Bedroom Cleaning )

Executive skills addressed: Organization, task initiation Organizing Notebooks/Homework 1. With your child, decide on what needs to be included in the organizational system: A place to keep unfinished homework? Notebooks or binders to keep notes and completed assignments? Use a checklist to keep this information handy. 2. Once you ve listed everything you need, decide how best to handle them, one at a time. For example, you and your child might decide on a colored folder system with a different color for completed assignments, unfinished work, and other papers. Or you might decide to have a separate small threering binder for each subject or one large binder for all subjects. You may want to go to an office supply store or look through an ordering catalog or online to get ideas about what is possible. 3. Gather the materials you need. Materials should include a 3-hole punch, lined and unlined paper, subject dividers, and small Post-it packages to flag important papers. 4. Set up the notebook and folders, labeling everything clearly. 5. At the beginning of each homework session, have your child take out the folders for completed assignments, unfinished work, and material to be filed. Have your child make a decision about each piece of material and where it should go. Complete this process before beginning homework. 6. When homework is completed, have your child place homework in the appropriate folder and file anything else that needs to be saved. 1. As much as possible, involve your child in the design of the organizing system. What works well for one person may be a disaster for another because it is not a good fit. 2. Redesign the elements that aren t working right. Involve your child in the troubleshooting. How could this work better for you? is a good way to approach this. 3. For people who are not naturally organized, it can take a long time for this process to become a habit. Keep in mind that supervision throughout adolescence may be necessary.