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Home » auditory » Page 2

ADHD Must Be Contagious

Active little boy laughing - that's not ADHD

Attention Deficit Hyperactive Disorder (ADHD) is very trendy. If you search on Google, you will see that there are 34,800,000 hits for it (this is today, but I am sure tomorrow it there will be more, if only because I am adding this post…). It is amazing that as the years goes by, the percentage of kids and people with ADHD goes up.

Do you have an explanation to this?

In this post, let me try to give you some explanation to this inflation in the diagnosis of ADHD.

Read ADHD Must Be Contagious »

Published: February 8, 2008 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: April 21, 2020In: Health / Wellbeing, Parenting, Education / Learning, Opinion, Kids / Children Tags: visual, attention deficit / add / adhd, health / wellbeing, food, teaching / teachers, communication styles, learning styles, diet, eating disorders, body image, neurolinguistic programmiing / NLP, fat, hyperactive, k-12 education, digital, kinesthetic, auditory, kids / children

How to Stimulate Auditory Kids

Auditory child's hands playing piano

Auditory kids pay the most attention to sounds. To them, voices, tones, pitches and rhythms provide a wealth of information and carry emotions that other kids simply ignore. They have superior abilities to “record” and “play back” TV shows, skits, songs and conversations. On the other hand, they are sequential thinkers and must be able to focus on one thing at a time.

Auditory kids can often be distinguished by the way they look down and talk to themselves. Their self-talk is often louder than what goes on in the outside world. On the other hand, they are distracted by sounds and disturbed by unpleasant or loud noises.

Here are some ideas that will help auditory kids learn better, be happier and love learning.

This post is part 4 of 4 in the series How to Stimulate Kids

Read How to Stimulate Auditory Kids »

Published: January 22, 2008 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: August 31, 2020In: Kids / Children, Parenting, Education / Learning Tags: practical parenting / parents, auditory, preschool, kindergarten, toddlers, communication styles, learning styles, learning disabilities, child care, communication, k-12 education, early childhood

Diagnosing Learning Difficulties and Gifted Children in the Early Years

Drawing of cogs inside a head and symbols flying around

It was psychologist Howard Gardner’s book, Frames of Mind: The Theory of Multiple Intelligences, which first questioned the common psychological orthodoxy about intelligence, the intelligence quotient (IQ), and presented the revolutionary concept of Multiple Intelligences. At a time when a set of tests positioned children in a single spot on the bell curve and educators’ capacity to affect this position was seen as limited, the dawn of multiple intelligences shone a light at the end of a tunnel.

With this great recognition of our ability to enhance intelligence, the two extreme parts of the bell curve – the children with the learning difficulties and the gifted children – became the center of attention. Those two seemingly unrelated ranges of ability require the same type of attention and multiple intelligences brought hope for improvement for both.

A natural progression of that was the area of early diagnosis and early intervention. Should we diagnose learning difficulties during early childhood or will this put a label on them that is too hard to remove? Should we diagnose gifted children or will this doom them to isolation and social challenges? And once a special need is identified, should we intervene or just let nature take its course and allow the kids to “grow out of it”?

Each of the questions presents the choice between a reactive and a proactive approach. For government organizations, these questions are translated to the cost difference between the two, which then determines the approach. For teachers, however, critical time plays an important role in the choice.

Read Diagnosing Learning Difficulties and Gifted Children in the Early Years »

Published: December 13, 2007 by Ronit Baras
Last modified: March 18, 2021In: Parenting, Education / Learning, Emotional Intelligence, Kids / Children Tags: toddlers, communication, communication styles, early childhood, learning styles, success, learning disabilities, child care, k-12 education, digital, kinesthetic, auditory, visual, gifted, kindergarten

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