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It's So Much Work to Be Your Friend: Helping the Child with Learning Disabilities Find Social Success
Rick Lavoie, M.A., M.Ed.

It's So Much Work to Be Your Friend: Helping the Child with Learning Disabilities Find Social Success

As any parent, teacher, coach, or caregiver of a learning disabled child knows, every learning disability has a social component. The ADD child constantly interrupts and doesn’t follow directions. The child with visual-spatial issues loses his belongings. The child with a nonverbal communication disorder fails to gesture when she talks. These children are socially out of step with their peers, and often they are ridiculed or ostracized for their differences. A successful social life is immeasurably important to a child’s happiness, health, and development.

It's Nobody's Fault: New Hope and Help for Difficult Children
Harold S. Koplewicz, MD

It's Nobody's Fault: New Hope and Help for Difficult Children

Brain chemistry, not bad parenting, is responsible for the 12 percent of children younger than 18 who have diagnosable brain disorders, such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), separation anxiety disorder (SAD), or enuresis (bed-wetting). Through case studies, scientific data, and information about children’s development and brain chemistry, Koplewicz helps parents understand the obstacles their brain-disordered children face. A practicing psychiatrist, he also suggests means, including therapy and medication, by which families may lessen the difficulties posed by those disorders. He devotes the final section of the book to considerations of the nature and treatment of problems including, besides those noted above, depression, conduct disorder, bipolar disorder, and autism. Presented with compassion but in no-nonsense style, his effort offers a wealth of scientific information in a format easily accessible to parents, extended families, and friends of “difficult” children.
—Kathryn Carpenter from Booklist

Journey to Gameland: How to Make a Board Game from Your Favorite Children's Book
Ben Buchanan

Journey to Gameland: How to Make a Board Game from Your Favorite Children's Book

Eleven-year-old (and dyslexic) Ben Buchanan, who created a board game based on the popular Harry Potter books, provides advice for all children who would like to turn their favorite book into a board game. Along with his co-authors, he offers a step-by-step process, with suggestions for parents, librarians, and teachers, on how to help children transform their favorite book into a board game.

A collection of art supplies
About LD, Gifted & LD, Self-Esteem & Stress Management, Teaching & Instruction, Working with Families

Kids' Art

Using colors, textures, and art materials of all kinds can be tools to see the world and express experiences. Use these pieces of kids’ art to inspire and encourage your own students with learning disabilities.

View of person's hands writing in notebook
About LD, ADHD, Gifted & LD, Reading & Dyslexia, Self-Esteem & Stress Management, Working with Families

Kids' Voices

Kids with learning disabilities often see the world through a different lens. Share these stories with your students with LD and ADHD to help get their creative juices flowing.

I Know I Can Climb the Mountain
Dale S. Brown

I Know I Can Climb the Mountain

This anthology of poetry is organized to show the experience of a person who takes charge of her own life despite difficulties and challenges. Fifty-three poems and three short stories describe the experience of growing up. The author, a women who wrote these poems during her childhood and teenage years, experienced a difference currently called by many names; specific learning disabilities, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, and dylexia. She was in an ordinary class and received virtually no help for the challenges she experienced due to her handicaps.The poetry was published in journals of poetry, newspapers, and magazines when she was a teenager. Mountain Books asked the author to organize these poems into an anthology because the publisher believed they should be shared with today’s readers. They inspire and emmpower all people who have stuggled to overcome these difficulties. They sensitize parents and teachers who work to help children and adults who struggle. They show personal growth and encourage the reader to take responsibility for their own actions and experiences.

Knowledge to Support the Teaching of Reading
Catherine Snow, Peg Griffin, M. Burns

Knowledge to Support the Teaching of Reading

Basic reading proficiency is key to success in all content areas, but attending to students’ literacy development remains a challenge for many teachers, especially after the primary grades. Knowledge to Support the Teaching of Reading presents recommendations for the essential knowledge about the development, acquisition, and teaching of language and literacy skills that teachers need to master and use.

Teacher reading to group of kids
Reading & Dyslexia, Speech & Language, Teaching & Instruction

Language and reading skills

The following articles, expert answers, and books provide information on how to teach vocabulary, fluency, comprehension, and other language and reading skills to students with learning disabilities or ADHD.

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