Routledge

Wild Child

$77.95 inc GST $70.86 ex GST

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SKU: 9780789011022 - 88 Categories: , , NDIS approved: Yes Author: MORDASINI Publisher: Taylor & Francis ISBN: 9780789011022 Publish date: 6/04/2001

Product overview

How can you help the ADD child in your life?

Attention deficit disorder (ADD) is one of the most discussed yet least understood childhood disorders today. Here is a book that delivers the answers people are looking for!

Wild Child explains the symptoms, thinking patterns, and behavior of children and adolescents with ADD in terms that are understandable by parents and grandparents, yet relevant to the professionals who deal with these children. It outlines specific strategies that you can use to cope with the vast array of behavior, hyperactivity, and inattention problems experienced by children with ADD.

The concepts outlined in Wild Child will show you how to bond more closely with children who tend to alienate them, and help children feel better about themselves, aiding them in their quest to master their specific challenges. Because this book is written from the inside, explaining what the symptoms feel like from the perspective of someone with ADD as well as from the perspective of someone with an ADD child, readers will easily identify with the author.

This valuable book will help you and the ADD child in your life by helping you to:

  • build your personal confidence in dealing with ADD children and teens through knowledge and understanding
  • deal with specific problems in your family or patients
  • build esteem and sound emotional infrastructures in ADD children and empower them to take control of their lives

Wild Child features:

  • tables and motivational charts that illustrate how to work with an ADD child
  • checklists that adults can use if the suggested interventions fail with a particular child

ADD is truly a hidden disability, and the children suffering with it are usually labeled wild, crazy, or stupid. This, of course, leads to low self-esteem and underachievement, but Wild Child stresses that new learning can and does take place when proper motivators are applied. This book provides conc