Journal article
Comparison of Four Classroom-Based Strategies for Middle School Students With ADHD: A Pilot Randomized Controlled Trial
Journal of attention disorders, Vol.26(11), pp.1507-1519
09/2022
PMID: 35236137
Web of Science ID: WOS:000765338100001
Abstract
Middle school students with ADHD often experience negative academic outcomes. To intervene, schools frequently provide services through special education or section 504. These services include strategies, such as breaks, prompting, and sensory proprioception to remove the impact of construct-irrelevant variance. Student plans rarely include strategies, such as selfmanagement, designed to teach students skills to increase independent functioning. The purpose of this study was to compare the effectiveness of four strategies on engagement, disruptive behavior, and time to initiate tasks. Fifteen sixth and seventh grade students were randomized daily to one of four conditions. Results indicated large statistically significant differences. Social validity data indicated that students found prompting and self-management helpful, but preferred breaks and sensory proprioception. This study builds on a growing empirical base that supports the prioritization of strategies to teach skills over strategies to remove the impact of ADHD on performance.
Details
- Title
- Comparison of Four Classroom-Based Strategies for Middle School Students With ADHD
- Publication Details
- Journal of attention disorders, Vol.26(11), pp.1507-1519
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publisher
- Sage
- Number of pages
- 13
- Copyright
- ©The Author(s) 2022.
- Identifiers
- WOS:000765338100001; 99381340010906600
- Academic Unit
- Teaching, Leadership, and Research; School of Education
- Language
- English