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A Good Night’s Sleep Really Does Improve the Brain

Sleep appears to strengthen connections between communicating nerve cells in the brain - a process thought to form the basis of learning and memory.

Scientists in Switzerland studied a group of volunteers who were taught a new skill or shown images they would later have to remember.

The skill tasks included trying to follow a moving dot on a computer screen using a joy stick. One group of participants was then allowed to sleep normally for eight hours, while others were deprived of sleep or only permitted a nap.

The next day they were asked to repeat the tasks or recall the images while their brains were scanned using a technique known as functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI).

Those who had slept properly performed better, and this was reflected in their brain activity.

Dr Sophie Schwartz, from the University of Geneva, who led the study, said: “Our results revealed that a period of sleep following a new experience can consolidate and improve subsequent effects of learning from the experience. “This improvement comes from changes in brain activity in specific regions that code for relevant features of the learned material.”

Sleep helped the brain consolidate learned experiences and transform weak memories that might fade in time into more permanent fixtures, she said.

But how long it was necessary to sleep for the brain to benefit from this process was still unknown.

“Everybody sleeps, but some people sleep less than the average population, others have an abnormal sleep structure, and some drugs may change the duration of specific sleep stages,” said Dr Schwartz. “We also need to better study the impact of sleep on brain development in children.”

Brain scans should make it possible to assess the neuronal impact of sleep disturbances on patients with insomnia, sleep apnoea, depression or narcolepsy, she added.

“We now want to know which brain circuits are involved in these learning effects during the night and if we can experimentally enhance such effects,” said Dr Schwartz. “We want to assess how sleep disorders affect emotional and cognitive functioning, and what are the biological factors responsible for these effects.”

The research was presented today (mon) at the Forum of European Neuroscience meeting in Geneva, Switzerland.

Source: Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2008/07/14/easleep114.xml

14 July, 2008. 11:43 AM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

A Minute a Day Can Improve Children’s Reading Skills

Back to school – it’s a hectic time full of shopping, preparation and new routines. But just because children are headed back to school doesn’t mean that parents should stop teaching their children. And just because life is hectic doesn’t mean you can’t make time to improve their literacy skills.

Sharon Darling, president & founder of the National Center for Family Literacy encourages parents to take a minute – literally – to engage their children in learning activities while they go about their daily routine.

“A minute buys enough time to complete a task, take a deep breath, or prepare a response to a child’s question that caught you by surprise,” Darling said. “But a minute also can be used to increase vocabulary, expand reading skills, and add an extra dose of fun to an otherwise routine day.”

You may feel that there isn’t enough time to add more activities to an already packed 24 hours. But these ideas take just a minute:

• Choose a letter of the day. Look for the chosen letter in any printed materials you see: the newspaper, labels at the grocery store, street signs, billboards, or advertisements on TV. Make up a silly sentence using only words beginning with the letter of the day (Cats can cuddle. Dogs don’t drive. Amy always acts awake.)

• Singing songs is certainly a literacy activity. Try this twist: Sing short songs like Row, Row, Row Your Boat several times, leaving off the last word each time until there are no words left. This activity always produces giggles from children and parents alike.

• While you’re waiting for the bagel to toast, have your child look for the letter B on any items on your kitchen counter or table. Count as many as possible before the toaster pops.

• Play “Guess Who.” Describe a cartoon character, celebrity or historical figure. Allow a guess after each detail is disclosed. Expand your child’s vocabulary by using unusual words, and then explain their meaning. Take turns. Listen carefully to your child’s descriptions, especially his choice of vocabulary. Encourage him to paint a picture of the character with his words. At the end of the game, compliment him on any unusual or new words used.

• While stuck in traffic, describe the view from the car by taking “word turns.” The activity is as easy as the name suggests. Parent and child each add a word until the scene is described. (A…yellow…convertible…with… a… golden… retriever… in… the… back… seat… is… next… to… our… car.) This activity works well on a walk around the block or while waiting in line at the check-out counter, too.

• Talk to your child about his day. Pretend to be a television reporter. Try questions like “what was the most surprising (curious, funny, eventful) thing that happened today?” Or gather news for the local paper. “If your day’s activities were an article in the newspaper, what would the headline be?” You are giving your child opportunities to increase vocabulary, recall and reflect, and you are receiving a more detailed version of the time you spent apart. Be prepared to answer the same questions. You and your child will begin looking for events to report to each other.

Children spent five times as much time outside of the classroom, so learning shouldn’t be confined to the classroom,” Darling said.

The National Center for Family Literacy, the worldwide leader in family literacy, has raised more than $115 million for literacy efforts since its founding in 1989. More than 1 million families have made positive educational and economic gains as a result of NCFL’s work, which includes training more than 150,000 teachers and thousands of volunteers. For more information, contact 1-877-FAMLIT-1 or visit http://www.famlit.org.

Source: Newswise
http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/542479/

12 July, 2008. 2:00 PM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

Low Maths Teaching Standards Failing Kids

Students are being taught maths at the most superficial level by teachers rushing to pass on the basic skills while shying away from complex ideas.

In yet another example of children being failed by national school curriculums, a special report for the state leaders finds maths teaching is failing students by setting the bar too low.

The National Numeracy Review report, released to The Weekend Australian, criticises the national benchmarks in maths, which assess students against minimum standards rather than requiring a desirable proficiency.

“The implication (is) that minimum standards are good enough, at least for some students,” says the report on numeracy commissioned by the Council of Australian Governments. “All students and their families, however, have a right to expect high-quality - not minimum - numeracy outcomes from their schooling.”

The review committee, chaired by the former head of the NSW Board of Studies Gordon Stanley, says the time spent teaching maths in classrooms has decreased over the past decade, yet students are expected to learn about a greater number of mathematical concepts.

“Curriculum emphases and assessment regimes should be explicitly designed to discourage a reliance upon superficial and low-level proficiency,” the report says. It recommends phasing out the streaming of students according to their ability, citing research that says it has little effect on achievement.

“It does produce gains in attainment for higher-achieving students at the expense of lower-attaining students,” it says.

The report recommends that all teachers, regardless of their intended speciality, be trained as numeracy teachers and maths be taught across all subjects.

The report says primary school students should spend five hours a week and high school students four hours a week on maths and numeracy, including time spent learning maths in other subjects.

The report also suggests introducing specialist maths teachers to work shoulder-to-shoulder with other teachers, particularly those without specialist training in maths teaching.

Source: Melbourne Herald Sun, Australia
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,24006438-663,00.html

12 July, 2008. 1:27 PM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

Parents Should Raise Adults, not Kids

Too many parents have the wrong approach when raising their children.

That’s according to sociologist and youth minister Jim Hancock, who says parents should not raise children. They should raise adults.

“Our task has often been defined as raising children and ultimately that’s what we’ve ended up with - adult-aged children who don’t feel very well prepared for life in the real world,” Hancock said. ” I think if we were to shift our emphasis to raising adults, everybody is happier.”

In his book, Raising Adults: A Humane Guide to Parenting in the New World, Hancock explains that the main difference between raising children and raising adults is summed up in a key word from the recent Fourth of July holiday: independence.

“It begins with the notion that I do not want to be a daddy forever,” Hancock said. “It starts with getting them away from being dependent on us. A lot of it has to do with how we interact with them around problem solving.”

Hancock emphasizes that his parenting philosophy is not based on permissiveness. He fully agrees that parents need to set guidelines and apply discipline.

However, he said, “we are to do all of those things and do all of those things moderately. If a kid is playing in traffic, it is my obligation and duty and capacity as an adult to reach out and snatch her out of the way. But explaining to her why traffic is dangerous is not nearly as useful as walking with her to the edge of the street and helping her understand through intelligent questions about the velocity of passing vehicles and all of the dangers that are associated with that.”

Hancock’s parenting strategy involves asking kids good questions, helping them see their options and then allowing them to learn from the resulting consequences, good and bad — all in a controlled environment of parental love and boundaries.

“We find ways instead of instructing our children and directing our children to helping them learn to explore their environment,” Hancock continued. “One thing we should never ask our kids is, ‘Do you have your jacket, homework, gym bag, backpack, keys,’ listing everything I can think of that you might possibly need in order to survive your day. I think effective parents learn to ask their children, ‘Do you believe you have everything that you need for today,’ and teach their children to figure out what is on that list.”

If a child forgets to pack a lunch or bring along lunch money, the child will be hungry that day. But Hancock says the child probably will not forget to prepare for lunch again.

“We have almost no record of children starving from one missed lunch on the North American continent,” Hancock said, adding that in this context, parents let their children forget or make a mistake so they can learn a skill that increases their likelihood of becoming a responsible adult.

Hancock tells the story of a woman who skipped a business meeting in order to take her adolescent son’s homework to him at school. “I thought, ‘how long has she been doing that?’ Probably since he was 6 years old, and he’s learned to depend upon her for those kinds of details. He will be very angry with her one day when she takes a vacation or dies and he’s left without his homework.”

Not to mention when he’s 32 and the boss needs the memo, and his mother is not there to bring the document to him.

In his free, online book, Ten Things We Should Never Say to Kids, Hancock tempers this advice by suggesting that parents should never say to their children, “You can do anything you set your mind to.”

“That’s the kind of wishful thinking that leaves kids not quite trusting us,” Hancock explained. “We have blown smoke at them instead of talking about goal setting and hard work and dedication. The setting of one’s mind on something does not equal success.

“If you think you can’t, you won’t. If you think you can, you might.”

And if you think you can implement these parenting philosophies, you just might raise a well-adjusted adult instead of raising a child.

Source: Warrick Publishing, IN
http://www.tristate-media.com/articles/2008/07/11/warricknews/editorial/03parents.txt

11 July, 2008. 11:25 AM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

Verbally Aggressive Mothers Direct their Children’s Behavior

A new study reveals that verbally aggressive (VA) mothers tend to control their children’s choice of activities as well as use physical negative touch, along with directives, when trying to alter their child’s actions.

Researchers led by Steven R. Wilson of Purdue University videotaped forty mothers as they completed a ten minute play period with one of their children between the ages of three and eight years. The mothers then completed a series of questionnaires including the Verbal Aggressiveness Scale.

Mothers who scored higher on the self-reported VA Scale engaged in more frequent directing of their child’s behavior during the play activities. These mothers were more likely to control activity choices as well as the pace and duration of activities. High VA mothers did so repeatedly and in a manner that tended to enforce an activity choice they had made. Low VA mothers were more likely to follow their child’s lead or seek their child’s input about choice of activity.

High VA mothers used physical negative touch (PNT) when trying to change their child’s actions. Examples of parental PNT by high VA mothers included restraining a child by the shoulder or the wrist to prevent him or her from reaching a toy. No instances of PNT occurred for low VA mothers.

In addition, children with low VA mothers displayed virtually no resistance to their mother’s directives. Children with high trait VA mothers occasionally resisted their mothers’ directives, though this resistance tended to be indirect and short-lived.

“Our study has implications for parenting classes and interventions,” the authors conclude. “In addition to talking about why it is important for parents to avoid lots of verbally aggressive behavior to avoid damaging their child’s self-esteem, parents who have this tendency also need to learn how to follow their child’s lead and read their child’s signals, as opposed to just taking over the play period themselves.”
Source: Science Daily
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/07/080709155312.htm

10 July, 2008. 12:19 PM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

Parenting Style Reflected in How Children Are Fed

Parents’ general approach to raising their children is often apparent in how they manage their kids’ diets — suggesting that efforts to control childhood obesity need to consider family dynamics, according to researchers.

In a study of 239 parents of first-grade children, researchers found that parents who were strict in general also tended to have an “authoritarian” approach to their children’s eating — banning certain foods, for instance, or using pressure to get them to eat fruits and vegetables.

Similarly, parents who were generally “permissive” in what they let their children eat tended to have similar parenting styles.

In between these two groups, the researchers found, were “authoritative” parents. These parents set limits on their children’s diets, but often used more positive approaches — like following a healthy diet themselves — to get their kids to eat well.

The findings show that parents’ general styles are important in their children’s diets, according to Dr. Laura Hubbs-Tait and colleagues at Oklahoma State University in Stillwater.

They also suggest that efforts to help obese children lose weight are “not likely to be successful” unless the underlying family dynamics are addressed, the researchers report in the Journal of the American Dietetic Association.

In general, experts recommend that parents use positive approaches to get their children to eat right — by setting a good example with their own diets, for example.

But in this study, both the strict and permissive parents typically failed to serve as good dietary role models for their children.

“Due to the infrequency of healthy eating modeled by both permissive and authoritarian parents,” the researchers write, “food and nutrition professionals might encourage both to begin more healthy eating — for the sake of their own health and that of their children.”

A lack of attention to family dynamics may help explain why child obesity treatment is often less than successful, according to Hubbs-Tait and her colleagues.

“Food and nutrition professionals who are implementing dietary change or obesity treatment programs need to include more complex approaches to behavioral change that include parenting styles and family dynamics,” they conclude.

Source: Reuters
http://tinyurl.com/5vwx95

10 July, 2008. 12:11 PM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

Infants in Child Care Put on More Weight

New babies who are regularly looked after by people who are not their parents weigh more by nine months of age than babies who are just cared for by their mother or father, according to a study published today.

The links between child care, a baby’s weight and feeding practices that may affect the risk of becoming overweight, including breastfeeding and introducing solid foods at an earlier age, were examined.

Juhee Kim, of the University of Illinois, and Karen Peterson, of the Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, who wrote the study appearing in the Archives of Paediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, conclude “child care influences both infant feeding practices and risk of overweight at least during infancy“.

Visits were made to the homes of 8,150 nine-month-olds who were weighed and measured in 2001 and 2002. Their main carer gave information regarding child care.

A total of 55.3pc of the infants received regular child care from someone other than a parent.

Among those, half were in full-time child care, 40.3pc began child care at younger than three months, 39.3pc began between three and just under six months old (at 5.9 months) and 20.7pc began at six months or older.

The researchers write: “Infants who initiated child care at younger than three months were less likely to have been breastfed and were more likely to have received early introduction of solid foods than those in parental care.”

They note that infants in part-time child care gained 175g (0.4lb) more weight during nine months than infants cared for by parents.

Those who were cared for by other relatives gained 162g ( 0.35lb) more weight, had a higher rate of early introduction to solid foods, which was shown to be a risk factor for weight gain, and were less likely to begin breastfeeding.

Source: Irish Independent, Ireland
http://www.independent.ie/lifestyle/parenting/infants-in-child-care-put-on-more-weight-1429725.html

9 July, 2008. 1:26 PM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

Don’t Teach Boys to Be Like Girls

If you were an energetic nine-year-old boy who loved school, did your best but also loved charging about, trying to beat your friends at every game possible, imagine the hell of our currrent state school system where ball games are banned from the playground in case someone gets hurt, there is no outside play in bad weather and you are constantly in trouble for being too competitive because winning is not what it’s about. And, worse, Jamie Oliver fruit smoothies have replaced sponge pudding in your school dinner, so you’re starving by two o’clock.

Sue Palmer is a former head teacher, literacy adviser and the author of 21st Century Boys. She says it is a biological necessity that boys run about, take risks, swing off things and compete with each other to develop properly. “If they can’t, a lot of them find it impossible to sit still, focus on a book or wield a pencil,” she says, “so their behaviour is considered ‘difficult’, they get into trouble and tumble into a cycle of school failure.”

Boys are three times as likely as girls to need extra help with reading at primary school, and 75 per cent of children supposedly suffering from ADHD (attention deficit hyperactivity disorder) are male. “We are losing boys at a rate of knots, particularly in literacy,” Palmer says, “because at some point in the past 30 years, masculinity became an embarrassment.”

Research by Simon Baron-Cohen, a respected Cambridge professor, that began as an investigation into autism, puts a solid case for biological male/female differences in the brain, with boys tending to be “systematisers” and girls “empathisers”. This explains why boys generally are less keen on reading and comprehension, and lag behind girls in literacy. A lot of boys find it easier to explain the workings of a watch than to discuss how a character in a story is feeling. “But now,” says Palmer, “apart from the very bright ones, boys aren’t even doing better at maths and science.”

Some people blame this nosedive, first noticed in the mid-Nineties, on the “feminisation” of education - too many women teachers, girl-friendly classroom environments and modular exam systems that suit girls’ study skills but disadvantage risk-takers. “Geniuses are much more likely to be male,” Palmer says, “but if you don’t tick the right boxes, you fail.”

There are seven times as many women primary school teachers as men, but Christine Skelton, Professor of Gender Equality in Education at Birmingham University, argues that there have always been far more female teachers than male. “Obviously there are some women who understand active boys, and some men who don’t, just as there are energetic girls and inactive boys,” she says.

The current generation of teachers, though, were born and raised in an atmosphere dominated by women’s liberation and “non-gender-specific” education that began in the Seventies. Barbies were banned, most protagonists in books were female and there was no tolerance of war or superhero play. As a head teacher, Palmer remembers making her reception teacher remove all the cloakroom pegs that depicted tractors for boys and bunnies for girls.

“The belief was that you were shaped by your environment, and it was the teacher’s responsibility to ‘socialise’ boys away from their natural inclinations and to encourage girls to study traditionally male subjects such as physics and technology,” she says.

Palmer would never deny that some of it was absolutely necessary - but with movements such as Reclaim the Night, Greenham Common and Gay Pride, groups that offered an alternative perspective to the traditionally dominant male view taking centre stage, masculinity became suspect. “I really think,” she says, “that the almighty cock-up of the sisterhood in the Seventies was that we believed we could turn boys into girls.”

Palmer says that most women are not natural risk-takers, so for teachers who have not helped to bring up brothers and who don’t have sons, boys’ behaviour can be frightening. “Play-fighting, for example, reaches a peak at age 7 or 8 but is not actually aggressive,” she says. “It’s social - it’s the way boys get to know each other and see how the other one ticks. A lot of women teachers are horrified when I suggest that they should let boys get on with fighting and shouting because eventually they’ll come out the other side and start negotiating.”

Another problem for boys seeking adventure is that, because we live in an increasingly risk-averse society, children are rarely allowed to play unsupervised. When did you last see a group of boys climbing a tree?

“There is a rational fear of increased traffic but also an irrational fear of stranger danger, fanned by media reporting of child abduction,” says Palmer. “Parents are worried about being considered irresponsible, so they never let their children out of their sight.” And because we are not used to seeing boys playing outside, when we do it feels hostile even when what is going on is not particularly boisterous.

Dan Travis, a sports coach, argues that it is very important for boys to muck about on their own. “Coaching is formal and necessary but should only take up 20 per cent of the time they play,” he says. “The informal 80 per cent is where most of the learning and practising occurs - away from adult supervision.”

Travis is running a campaign to bring competition back to school sport. “The Sport for All ethos took hold in the Seventies and never let go,” he says. “Games are only about inclusion, with no winners allowed.” This is disastrous for boys, who need to compete to establish their place in the hierarchy, which is how they organise their friendships and something that they understand from nursery age onwards. It is also bad for sport. Palmer adds that “self-esteem” arrived from America and now no child is allowed to “lose” at anything.

Palmer is not suggesting that boys should be allowed to behave in any way they want. What we need, she says, is to celebrate what makes them boys and help them to understand the things that don’t come naturally to them. That means getting them outside more, particularly as space gets squeezed in urban schools. “Not letting boys be boys is not only detrimental to them but also to girls, many of whom become overcompliant with what is considered ‘good’ behaviour and could do with a shove outdoors to take more risks,” she says. “I certainly wish that had happened to me.”

Palmer is especially enthusiastic about the few “outdoor nurseries” that we have in this country, and about the Scandinavian system that puts off formal learning until the age of 7 or 8, concentrating instead on playing outside and the development of social skills.

In the ideal Palmer world, everyone would go to a Scandinavian-style school. What we are doing instead is bringing in the Early Years Foundation Stage, a new government framework that becomes law in September. It says that by the age of 5 children should be writing sentences, some of which are punctuated. “That would be impressive for a seven-year-old,” says Palmer. “So rather than tackling the imbalance in the way that we have treated boys for too long, we are going to make them sit still and learn even younger. I’d call that little short of state-sponsored child abuse.”

21st Century Boys will be published by Orion in early 2009

Source: Times Online, UK
http://women.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/women/families/article4288100.ece

8 July, 2008. 11:58 AM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

Parents Are Part of Equation for Teens’ Math Success

National U.S. Department of Education studies show that high school students with strong math backgrounds are more likely to go to college, finish faster and earn more money. With today’s competitive job market, strong math skills are increasingly important for future success. Yet, the U.S. Department of Labor reports, only 20 percent of the workforce possesses the skills required by 60 percent of all new jobs early this century.

In fact, math-focused college degrees, including engineering, economics, marketing and computer science, are all among the most lucrative for entry-level salaries. The top careers of the future, according to U.S. News & World Report, such as a green consultant, investment banker or patient advocate, will require math, science and technology backgrounds that your student should begin working on in middle school.

“Math skills are critical to the future success of our high school students and learning doesn’t stop in the classroom,” said Gail Burrill, math teacher and former president of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM). “Parents are a critical part of the equation for helping teens gain a strong foundation in math and making sure their children have the background they need to succeed.”

Burrill, who has been honored with the Presidential Award for Excellence in Teaching Mathematics, has several tips for parents to help their teen find the right path to math success:

1. Strong math skills start at home.

Whether or not you enjoy or were good at math yourself, children need encouragement to learn that hard work and persistence are important for success and understanding in math. Be sure they attend school on a regular basis. Be positive and inquisitive-ask how things are going in class, encourage your children to work hard and help them find solutions if they are struggling. By paying attention to your teen’s education and expressing high expectations for their success, they learn that their math education is a priority.

2. Math is important for any career.

People with strong math backgrounds are more likely to be employed and earn more, even if they have not gone to college. Math is also an important skill for people in all stages of life to make decisions about such issues as personal finance, health or property management. Without taking a challenging math curriculum throughout high school, teens’ career options will be seriously limited. Building a strong foundation in math should begin in middle school, allowing them to succeed in math through their high school years and beyond.

3. The right tools can make all the difference.

Math can sometimes be a challenge for even the best students, so make sure your student has the right tools for success. For example, research shows that students do better in math when they use a graphing calculator at home and in class, like the TI-Nspire from Texas Instruments. For additional help with class work, check with your student’s math teacher or counselor to see if your school provides resources, such as a homework hotline, organized study group, tutoring program, after-school program or even extra credit work. If not, check to see if your state education department or state mathematics organization offers some support.

4. Show teens that math is important in everyday life.

Showing students how to relate math to the “real world” will help them understand why it’s important. Figuring out the remaining cell phone minutes on their monthly plan, how to balance their first checkbook or the difference between the weekly cost of driving a car and taking the bus all require math skills. If students know that math can help them make good decisions every day, they are more likely to want to learn.

5. Ensure that they take four years of high-quality math in high school.

All students should be enrolled in challenging, high-quality math courses. If your student is entering high school in the next few years, plan to work with a counselor to create an academic program that allows your child to take a challenging math course every year to be sure he or she has the preparation that can open doors for career options in the future.

Source: North American Press Syndicate, NY
http://www.napsnet.com/articles/58766.html

8 July, 2008. 11:56 AM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

ADHD Over-Diagnosis Is Symptom of Greater Problem

DEAR DR. FOURNIER: I recently read your article answering a mother’s question about her daughter’s request to get tested for ADHD before taking her ACT/SAT college exams. If so diagnosed, the daughter could take them untimed and be prescribed ADHD medicine. In your column, you did not recommend getting diagnosed just for these exams.

I think you missed the daughter’s main point. I think it was obvious the student wished to be diagnosed so she could take the tests untimed.

Students specifically have a difficult time in the English and reading comprehension sections because of the amount of reading required to answer the questions.

What is wrong with giving a child more time to finish the test?

ASSESSMENT: Whether the student desired to get a prescription for ADHD medicine or merely wanted more time to take college entrance exams, my answer is still the same. I have worked with children for 28 years, and each year my office is inundated with calls from parents wanting to have their children tested and diagnosed with ADHD.

But this over-diagnosis is the symptom of a greater problem: America’s drive to achieve success by the path of least resistance. Parents and their children desire success in the classroom. Teachers want their students to score higher on tests. And doctors want busy, successful medical practices that “help” children in need.

The misdiagnosis of ADHD in children — and the prescription-medicine regimen that follows — is a shortcut equivalent to copying another student’s answers on a test.

Each year when parents ask me for the name of a “professional” who could diagnose their child with ADHD so that the child can have more time on standardized tests, I instead recommend several time-saving, test-taking strategies.

Unfortunately, many parents don’t want to go there. They would rather lie, cheat and steal: Lie to the doctors. Cheat the education system. And steal their child’s morality and innocence.

On another note, the letter you refer to specifically stated that the daughter wanted to get diagnosed with ADHD so she could take the ADHD pills as her her friends do. These pills are amphetamines — chemicals very similar to stronger drugs that can lead to addiction, depression, anorexia and even suicide.

Bottom line: No one should purposely get misdiagnosed with ADHD for any reason, whether or not he ever plans to take the medicine.

WHAT TO DO: Refuse to lower your moral standards to follow the crowd down the easy road. If parents are so willing to quickly sell their children out to cut a few corners, then why should we expect our children to make any different choices?

Even if you lived in a moral vacuum, there is another reason not to get your child misdiagnosed with ADHD. College boards and schools are quickly catching on to this trend, making the requirements more stringent to get untimed tests. Furthermore, if a student is somehow caught trying to beat the system, the stigma of being a liar and a cheat could follow him the rest of his life.

Will that student find success in school or the workplace if he is known to be dishonest? I surely wouldn’t hire anyone with that reputation.

Finally, there are many test-taking strategies and other ways to improve your child’s score on ACT/SAT exams. These skills will improve reading comprehension and allow your child to focus without the need of strong, mood-altering prescription drugs.

By using these methods, your child’s moral compass will remain intact, and you will teach your child a lesson in honesty that could last a lifetime.

Source: Henderson Gleaner, KY
http://www.courierpress.com/news/2008/jul/08/adhd-over-diagnosis-is-symptom-of-greater/

8 July, 2008. 11:44 AM. Link | Digg it! | Comments: No Comments »

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