16 answers

ADHA And Dyslexia Confirmed

My 8 year old daughter was confirmed as having ADHD and Dyslexia on the 18th. Her teachers and I have suspected for sometime. She is on the worlds best nutritional supplements and we watch her diet. She isn't classic ADHD in as much as she isn't out of control with the constant movement. She has impulse control issues and flies into rages. Her teachers are super. My question is does any body have any experience with the combination of these two diagnosis' and what if any tricks have you learned to help in the learning process.

3 moms found this helpful

What can I do next?

So What Happened?™

Thanks for all your input. Especially, Thank You, to those of you who sent me the web sites with the great information. I will pass this along to her teacher too. She is very committed to learning all she can about ways to help Payten. I would try the home school thing but the the one thing God didn't give me was the patients to teach. I thank him very much for the ones he did give it to. And for hose of you who are dealing with these problems yourselves, you are in my prayers. Thanks to all who have tried to market their nutritional products but we have that part completely under control.

Featured Answers

I have Dyslexia...found out in the first grade. I had a super hard time learing to read, but I am now almost finished with my master's thesis and I teach 8th grade reading and writing.

One of the tricks that helps me is highlighting...post-its for her grade. The color helps keep my eyes on the words...also recently I came across color transparencies...thought this was a cool idea.

It helps the letters seem clearer.

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

Vision Therapy! My sister Hannah has both of those issues, and this last winter she has gone through vision therapy. It has been wonderful. I don't know if your daughter has trouble reading at all, but if she does, it might be worth looking into. Do some research online. I don't know if there is a facility in Salem, but the doctors in Eugene at the Foley Institute have been wonderful, and it truly has made a difference. It could be that it wouldn't help your daughter, but I'm sure you're willing to try anything! It is worth at least looking into. Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

I have a son who ha ADHD and impulse control. The best thing we fine is a consistent schedule. That means both you and your child, which isn't easy when both of you work and your child is involved in extracurricular activities. Also getting the teacher on board is extremely important. It sounds like you have. We recently started a "behavior management program" for school. I have it in quotes because all we are doing is simply having the teacher write down what score our son achieves during school based on his behavior that day.

He was having a week recently where he was in trouble 4 times...for not listening, talking out of turn, simple control issues that are disruptive that we know he is able to control. Well, the "program" instituted is simply a piece of paper with his name, date, and then the 1-4 system....4=excellent, 3=good, 2=fair, 1=poor. The school/room rules are also listed. Be respectful, be safe, be kind, be responsible. We have discussed with our son what these mean, he knows and can generally state a behavior or 2 of good behavior.

The other thing we are doing is giving him incentives to behave. We have made copies of the forms and have him fill them out the night before school, so he gets it ingrained into his mind how he is going to behave. Then this copy gets hung on his bathroom mirror with tape by him. After the score comes home, we are hanging it in his room right by his door (we moved it when he had his birthday party for his friends last week) so he can see the how he is doing. He has had five 4's and one 2.5.

He does take Metadate in the morning for ADHD and then Clonidine at night for impulse control. The only day he got a 2.5 was the day he and dad went out for breakfast before late start at school and his medication was forgotten that morning.

Perhaps some of this will help you with your daughter and the impulse control....which can be as simple as talking out of turn when others are talking.

1 mom found this helpful

I, too, have dyslexia. The things that helped me were glasses, notes, and wordsearch puzzles. The glasses were not strong- they just evened out my eyesight and helped me to focus. The notes were written by someone else for me to copy. This was most important in school. Someone else wrote what I needed to know and I would take the notes home and copy them. Then I had notes, had done the work, and it helped me to learn what letters needed to go where. If I copy something wrong, I can go back to the original notes and see where I messed up, and I know when they are wrong because when I read back through the notes, they won't always make sense, but at least I have the original ones to fall back on. I hope all that just made sense. Since she is 8, her teacher can help her by having whatever she needs to write down on a paper beside her in large-ish print. It doubles the difficulty to have to write stuff from the board. I do it for my students- it really doesn't take much extra time at all.
And word searches- they force the mind to seek out one letter at a time. There are a bunch of letters all mixed up on a page and you have to pick out the right ones. Good training for the mind. Word search puzzles are a lot how a dyslexic sees a page of words. It can be very overwhelming. Even doing a puzzle a day or working on one a little every day should help her mind be able to work out words.
Numbers are a different world, though. I haven't quite figured out what to do about that yet. Good luck to you!
* I am so grateful for the little red line under misspelled words on computers that tell you that you just spelled a word wrong! I still make an error now and again, but when I type, the computer helps me see where I have goofed. It is the lazy way out, but don't discard it altogether. If she can have a laptop or something in high school, then it will make her life easier. I know they are allowed in college.

1 mom found this helpful

I have dyslexia myself. When I was in High school I went across the country to see Dr. Harold Levinson who has a different way of treating dyslexia than any other doctor. You might be interested to read his books or check out his website. I used to go for an appointment through the time I was in college. I never had any of the typical symptoms. Normally kids that have been diagnosed with these types of things generally have been able to compensate for the learning problems up until a certain point in many ways. Everyone that has dyslexia is not effected in the same way. Everyone always says you read things backwards, etc. But that was not my problem. I had problems taking notes in class. I was allowed in high school and college to tape lectures. I was allowed if I wanted to to get books on tape for classes. I was allowed to have extra time to take tests. I could do the same things it just took me longer to process, to read, etc. Here's his current website. http://www.dyslexiaonline.com/bio.html I have his first book, Smart but Feeling Dumb and A Scientific Watergate.

Good luck.
C.

1 mom found this helpful

My step-daughter has ADHD and had many tantrums. I once took a coloring book and put IT into time out. She was coloring with a yellow pen on newsprint and couldn't see the color. She stabbed the coloring book with the felt pen and went through the book several times!
I did a lot of making sure the light was good for projects and encouraged any positive behavior.
As far as the dyslexia goes, I'm dyslexic as is my son. There are many good and new ways to teach us. There is a "picture story" that can teach the multiplication tables, without the frustration. As far as reading goes what worked for my son was listening to books on tape and reading along with them. He now reads on his own and enjoys it (He's 10 and just read his first "real" book on his own!)
Good luck!

1 mom found this helpful

I have Dyslexia...found out in the first grade. I had a super hard time learing to read, but I am now almost finished with my master's thesis and I teach 8th grade reading and writing.

One of the tricks that helps me is highlighting...post-its for her grade. The color helps keep my eyes on the words...also recently I came across color transparencies...thought this was a cool idea.

It helps the letters seem clearer.

1 mom found this helpful

Hey there,

Toxins in products (particularly cleaning products)have been known to increase ADHD in children as well as many other things. I would love to tell you about what you can do to change this for your family! Please see my website
http://www.yourfamilyfirst.com/schusters4

It will change your life. It has mine.- K.

Hi - Congrats on turning 50! You know 50 is the new 30!! I am 47 and am mother to 4 year old Freddy who has recently been diagnosed w/ASD. Also a dietitian - can I ask what nutritional supplements your daughter is using?? Freddy is a notoriously picky eater . Thanks M.. M.

Required Fields

Our records show that we already have a Mamapedia or Mamasource account created for you under the email address you entered.

Please enter your Mamapedia or Mamasource password to continue signing in.

Required Fields

, you’re almost done...

Since this is the first time you are logging in to Mamapedia with Facebook Connect, please provide the following information so you can participate in the Mamapedia community.

As a member, you’ll receive optional email newsletters and community updates sent to you from Mamapedia, and your email address will never be shared with third parties.

By clicking "Continue to Mamapedia", I agree to the Mamapedia Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.