For almost two decades now, I’ve been criticizing the diagnosis of ADHD and the use of Ritalin and other psychostimulants with children (see, for example, my book The Myth of the ADD Child). Now, a new report in The New York Times today, says that physicians are starting to prescribe these drugs to poor children...Read More
We’re headed for a sea change when it comes to neurological disabilities in the workplace. Up until now, the model most often used has been deficit-oriented: people with neurological disabilities lack normal functioning; they need extra help in order to become effective employees. However, a new paradigm is emerging that turns this model on its head. Now...Read More
The October, 2012 issue of Educational Leadership, the flagship journal of the Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development (ASCD), in an issue dedicated to “Students Who Challenge Us,” features my article “First, Discover Their Strengths,” which highlights many of the ideas discussed in my forthcoming book Neurodiversity in the Classroom: Strength-Based Strategies to Help Students with Special Needs...Read More
Why is it that we expect children to sit quietly in their seats while they’re being taught in school? We even use the word “seatwork” to describe this behavior. I want to know who made this decision. I can imagine some grizzled old scholar somewhere in Europe during the late eighteenth century thinking: “You know, I really like...Read More
I was very glad to see the research report in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences(PNAS), concluding that children labeled ADHD have normal brains that simply develop later than their peers. This study compared brain scans over a period of years between a group of 223 children diagnosed as having ADHD and a...Read More
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