Many of child’s actions may be rooted in the characteristic lack of organization that is not fully within the child’s control. The family needs to intervene with strong organization and an understanding that the child needs extra help and patience in this area. At the same time, the child should not be held to low expectations, either. This typically includes things such as morning routines, homework time, bedtimes, and things like limits on video games. Be sure expectations are explicit. “Clean your room” is vague, and an ADHD child may be confused where even to begin and how to follow through before losing focus. It may be better to break it up into short, clear tasks: “Pick up toys”, “Vacuum rug”, “Clean hamster cage”, “Put away clothes–in the closet on hangers”.

Once you have established the household routine for the work week, for example, put up a schedule in your child’s room. You can use a whiteboard and make it fun by using colors, stickers, and other decorative aspects. Explain and point out everything on the schedule so that your child can understand it in different ways. Establish routines for all kinds of daily tasks, including homework, which tends to be a big issue for most kids with ADHD. Make sure your child writes down their homework every day in a planner and that there is a regular time and place for them to do their homework. Make sure to go over their homework before they begin and review it with them afterward. [4] X Research source Putting On The Brakes: Young People’s Guide to Understanding Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) by Patricia O. Quinn & Judith M. Stern (1991).

In the case of laundry, for example, ask your child to begin by finding all their socks and putting them away. You can make a bit of a game out of it by playing a CD and challenging your child to complete the task of finding all the socks and putting them in the appropriate drawer by the end of the first song. Once that is accomplished and you praise them for doing it correctly, you can then ask them to pick out and put away their underwear, PJs, and so on, until the task is competed. Breaking the project into smaller pieces spread out over time not only prevents behavior born of frustration, but also gives parents multiple chances to provide positive feedback while allowing children many opportunities to experience success. The more success experienced—and rewarded—the more a child begins to identify themselves as a success, giving a much needed self-esteem boost and helping them actually become more successful in the future. After all, success breeds success![6] X Research source Organize Your ADD/ADHD Child: A Practical Guide For Parents by Cheryl R. Carter (2011). You may still need to guide your child’s routines. ADHD makes it difficult to focus, not get distracted, and keep going on boring tasks. That does not mean they get to opt out of chores. However, the expectation that they can do it independently may or may not be realistic. . . this depends very much on your child. It is better to work together on such tasks in an accepting way, and make it a positive experience, than to expect too much and make it a point of frustration and argument.

Children with ADHD do well with storage cubes, shelves, wall hooks and the like to help them separate out items into categories and minimize crowding. Use of color-coding, pictures, and shelf labels also helps minimize visual stress. De-clutter. In addition to overall organizing, purging the “stuff” that will distract your child will help make the environment more calming. This does not necessarily mean stripping the room bare. However, getting rid of outgrown toys, clothing they do not wear, and cleaning out shelves of bric-a-brac that does not hold high appeal for the child can go a long way to making a more harmonious environment.

Make sure your child is looking at you, and you are making eye contact. While this is not a full assurance of attention, it is more likely your message will get through. Angry, frustrated, or otherwise negative talk has a way of getting “filtered out”. This is often a defense mechanism - ADHD kids tend to get people frustrated with them and they fear being criticized for something they cannot really control. Yelling, for example, may well not get the child’s attention. ADHD kids respond well to fun, the unexpected, and whimsical. Tossing a ball will often get attention, especially if it is thrown back and forth a bit before moving onto a request. Saying, “knock, knock?” and doing a joke may work. A call-and-response pattern or clapping pattern may work, too. These are all playful manners that typically will get “through the fog. " It is difficult for kids with ADHD to focus, so when they do exhibit focus, give them their best chance to keep it by not interrupting them or taking them away from the task at hand.

Children with ADHD should be doing some sort of physical activity at least 3-4 days a week. The best choices are martial arts, swimming, dance, gymnastics, and other sports that use a variety of body movements. You can even have them do a physical activity on their non-sports days, too, like going on a swing, riding a bike, playing at the park, and so on.

Making your child feel good about what they do is one key strategy to avoiding the need to discipline them in the first place. Do not be stingy on rewards. ADHD children need a lot of positive feedback. A lot of small, frequent rewards throughout the day work better than one large reward at the end of the day.

One expert reminds parents to “act, don’t yak!” Lecturing a child with ADHD is pointless, while powerful consequences say it all. [10] X Research source Taking Charge of ADHD: The Complete, Authoritative Guide For Parents by Russell A. Barkley (2005). Avoid responding to child’s behavior emotionally. If you get angry or yell, it may increase your child’s anxieties, fueling their belief that they’re a bad kid who never does anything right. In addition, it may also invite your child have the feeling that they are in control since you lost your composure. [11] X Research source Dr. Larry’s Silver’s Advice to Parents on ADHD by Larry N. Silver (1999).

As with most things in life, If you ignore it, it will escalate and get worse. Your best bet is to deal with the problem behavior the first time it occurs and right away. Enact discipline immediately after the behavior so that your child can connect their behavior with the discipline and your response. In this way, they will learn over time that this behavior comes with consequences, and hopefully stop engaging in the specific behavior. Children with ADHD can be impulsive and often do not consider the consequences to their actions. They often fail to realize they have done anything wrong. The cycle is such that if there are no consequences, this problem will get worse. Thus, they need adults to help them see this and learn the wrongness of their behavior and the potential consequences of continuing that behavior. Accept that ADHD children will just need more patience, guidance, and practice. If you compare an ADHD child with the “typical” child, you will likely get extremely frustrated. You will have to spend more time, energy, and thought into working with this sort of child. Stop comparing them to other “easier” kids. This is critical in having more positive–and thus more productive–interactions and results.

Many parents have found more success in changing bad behaviors, such as poor table manners at mealtimes, by instead focusing on giving positive encouragement and praise when their children do something right. Instead of criticizing how your child sits at the table or talks with food in their mouth, try praising them when they use their utensils properly and when they are a good listener. This will help your child pay more attention to what they’re doing in order to receive praise. Watch your ratio. Make sure your child gets more positive inputs than negative ones. You might have to go out of your way to “catch them being good” sometimes, but the benefits of praising more than punishing will be incalculable.

Consider setting up a positive behavior system that allows your child to earn privileges, such as an allowance bonus, a special day out, or something similar. By the same token, poor behavior results in the loss of points, but points can be earned back with extra chores or other such activities. [14] X Research source Taking Charge of ADHD: The Complete, Authoritative Guide For Parents by Russell A. Barkley (2005). A point system can help give children the motivation they need to comply. If your child is not motivated to pick up their toys before bedtime, knowing they will earn points toward a privilege may be all the incentive they need to comply. The best part of such a plan is that parents are no longer the bad guys when children don’t get privileges—their destinies are in their own hands and they have to take responsibility for their choices. Note that children have more success with a points system when it is clearly specified with a checklist, schedule, and deadlines. [15] X Research source Why Is My Child’s ADHD Not Better Yet? Recognizing The Undiagnosed Secondary Conditions That May Be Affecting Your Child’s Treatment by David Gottlieb, Thomas Shoaf, and Risa Graff (2006). Be aware checklists and schedules have limitations. ADHD makes even motivated children have difficulty staying on task. If the expectations are simply too high or not otherwise suitable, they may not experience success, and the system is useless. For example: A child who is struggling with an essay for homework, and is simply spending so much time on it that she missed the deadline for practicing the violin may be in a terrible bind. Another example: A child has great trouble with a behavior checklist, and he never gets enough gold stars to earn a reward. Without positive reinforcement, he acts out rather than “buys into” the system.

Instead of saying, “Stop jumping on the sofa”, say, “We sit on the sofa. " “Gentle hands with the cat” instead of, “Stop pulling on the cat’s tail. " “Criss cross applesauce!” instead of “Stop getting up. " Focusing on the positives works well when crafting family rules as well. Instead of “no playing ball in the house,” try “balls are outside toys. ” You may find more success with “walk slowly in the living room” than with “no running!”[17] X Research source Organize Your ADD/ADHD Child: A Practical Guide For Parents by Cheryl R. Carter (2011).

For instance, if your child gets out of bed to play at night, silently but firmly put them back where they belong without hugs and attention. Feel free to confiscate the toys, but do not discuss it at the time or they will feel rewarded by your attention or that the rules are up for debate. If you consistently fail to reward the bad behavior, it should disappear over time. If your child is cutting up their coloring book, simply take away the scissors and the book. A calm “we cut paper, not books” is all that is required.

Consider the little girl who asks for a Coke five or six times in three minutes, all while the parent is on the phone, or dealing with the other baby, or trying to fix dinner. Sometimes it’s tempting - and indeed, easier - to cave in: “Fine—go ahead but leave me in peace!” However, the message being sent out is that persistence will win the day and that she, and not the parent, is in control. ADHD children do not do very well with permissive discipline. These children need firm and loving guidance and boundaries. Long discussions about rules and why we have them do not work. Some parents are uncomfortable with this approach at first. However, keeping rules firm, consistent, and loving is not harsh or cruel.

Do not send your child to their room as punishment. Most children with ADHD will get easily distracted by their toys and belongings and have a wonderful time. . . and the “punishment” ends up being a reward. In addition, sending your child to their room is generally removed from and unrelated to the specific infraction, and they will have a hard time connecting the behavior with the punishment in order to learn not to repeat that behavior. Consequences should also be immediate. For example, if a child is told that it is to put their bike away and come inside but they continue to ride, do not tell them they cannot ride it tomorrow. Delayed consequences have little or no meaning to a child with ADHD, as they tend to live in the “here and now” and what happened yesterday has no real meaning for today. As a result, this approach will like result in a blow-up the following day when the consequence is enforced and the child actually has not made the connection. Instead, confiscate the bike immediately and explain you will discuss terms of earning it back at a later time.

Always follow through on what you say or threaten. Do not give too many warnings or make empty threats. If you give them multiple chances or warnings, make each come with a level of consequence with the final, second or third, accompanied by the punishment or discipline promised. Otherwise, they will test you every time to see how many chances it will be this time. Make sure both parents are on board with this disciplinary plan. In order to change the behavior, your child needs to have the same response from both parents. [22] X Research source Dr. Larry’s Silver’s Advice to Parents on ADHD by Larry N. Silver (1999). Consistency also means that the child knows what to expect when misbehaving no matter the venue. Sometimes parents are afraid to punish their children in public, fearful of how others will perceive the situation, but it’s important to show that the particular misbehavior has consequences wherever your child is. Be sure to coordinate with your child’s school, daycare, or Sunday school to make sure everyone there uses consistent, immediate, and powerful consequences as well. You do not want your child to get mixed messages.

If you engage in an argument or appear to waver, the message can be unintentionally sent is that you are treating the child as a peer who has a chance to win the argument. There is thus a reason, to the child’s mind, to keep pushing and keep arguing with and fighting you. This does not necessarily mean you are done for as a parent if you ever argue or waver in a discussion - just understand that being firm and consistent will yield best results. Always be specific in your instructions and be firm that they are to be followed.

Time-out is an effective punishment for a child with ADHD. It can be applied immediately to help the child see the connection to their actions. Children with ADHD hate to be still and quiet so it is very effective response to a bad behavior. Consider calming objects in time-out. Asking an ADHD child to sit in a chair quietly may completely backfire; they may not be able to do this. However, having objects available that help them keep calm and re-focus may accomplish the goal of “resetting”. This may include things like a yoga ball to sit on, using a fidget cube, doing a puzzle, or hugging a stuffed animal.

If your family is going out to dinner, for instance, the reward for good behavior might be the privilege of ordering dessert, while the consequence might be having to go straight to bed on returning home. If behavior starts to deteriorate at the restaurant, a gentle reminder (“What does good behavior earn tonight?”), followed if necessary by a more stern second comment (“Do you need to go to bed early tonight?”) ought to put your child back on track.

Scientists studying the brain structure of children of ADHD report that some parts of their brains are smaller than normal. One of these is the basal ganglia, which regulates muscle movement, telling muscles when they are needed for a given activity and when they should rest. For most of us, when we’re seated, the hands and feet don’t need to be in motion, but the less effective basal ganglia in a child with ADHD fails to inhibit excessive activity, so sitting still is harder for that child. [28] X Research source Why Is My Child’s ADHD Not Better Yet? Recognizing The Undiagnosed Secondary Conditions That May Be Affecting Your Child’s Treatment by David Gottlieb, Thomas Shoaf, and Risa Graff (2006). In other words, children with ADHD lack stimulation inside their brains and have poor impulse control, so they will work harder or “act out” to get that needed stimulation. Once parents realize their child isn’t simply being willful or thoughtless and that their child’s brain just processes things differently thanks to ADHD, they often find it easier to deal with behaviors. New-found compassion understanding provide more patience and willingness to restructure how they deal with their child. [29] X Research source Brainstorms: Understanding and Treating the Emotional Storms of Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder from Childhood Through Adulthood by H. Joseph Horacek, Jr. (1998).

For example, about 20% of those with ADHD also have bipolar or depressive disorders, while over 33% have behavioral disorders such as conduct disorder or oppositional defiance disorder. Many children with ADHD also have learning disabilities or problems with anxiety. [31] X Research source The ADHD Update: Understanding Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder by Alvin and Virginia Silverstein and Laura Silverstein Nunn (2008). Additional disorders or problems in addition to ADHD can make the job of disciplining your child more difficult. This is especially true if there are multiple medications with various potential side effects to take into account when trying to manage your child’s behaviors.

Your child’s ADHD is their version of “normal. " It’s a condition that can be effectively coped with, and your child can go onto lead a happy and healthy life!