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Graphic Novels Help Kids Cope
Reading improves well-being - that includes graphic novels. These visually appealing works can help kids cope and develop better psychological wellness.
Making Distraction Work for You
Being on the computer for hours and hours can take an enormous toll on our motivation and mood. Virtual depletion interferes with task initiation and time management, making us feel inefficient and stressed. And for young folx, this debilitation makes it tough to muster up the energy to complete homework, independently work during ‘asynchronous’ times, and participate efficiently in breakout groups.
Being a Supportive Parent: Helping your child with Anxiety or OCD
If you are a parent or caregiver of an anxious child, there is no doubt that you are effortfully trying to support them. You have given words of encouragement, answered their many "what if" questions, and eliminated anxiety provoking cues. You may have noticed that although these strategies help reduce distress in the short-term, anxiety hasn't gone away, and, in fact, you may have even observed it getting much worse!
Brain Hack: 4 Ways to Use Tests and Quizzes to Make You a Better (and Less Anxious) Student
There is a big debate about the value of tests, especially high-stakes standardized tests like the ACT or SAT. Concerns about undo stress, the tendency to “teach to the test,” inherent cultural biases, and the (mis)use of test scores to re-allocate funding away from marginalized communities are valid and real.
Considering Neuropsychological Testing? Here are 3 reasons testing might help.
The decision to pursue neuropsychological testing for your child, teenager, or young adult is not always an easy one. It can be a lengthy, expensive, and demanding process. Not to mention, you might have pursued multiple other evaluations and interventions, but your high hopes for “an answer” and substantive change were met with vague, incomplete, and ineffective remedies.
How Much Screen Time is Too Much?
How much screen time is too much screen time? If this isn’t the question of the year (or the century), I don’t know what is. Although the American Academy of Pediatrics recommends limited screen use for children under two years old and no more than 1 hour per day for children two to five years old, it feels nearly impossible to adhere to these limits in the face of e-learning and social distancing.
So, how do we know where to draw the line?
Why Do Neuropsychological Testing NOW?
It’s summer. The kids are finally out of school – or whatever that was children were sort of doing from April to June. Now, instead of setting your child’s daily school schedule, making sure they are paying attention to the teacher on the screen, and fighting with them to complete their homework, we can finally get back to normal. Okay, not normal, but you get my drift.
Black Lives Matter
During April and May, Mind Chicago ran a Community Support Fundraiser for the Illinois COVID-19 Response Fund (ICRF), a fund helping communities hit hardest by the pandemic.
Why Your Behavior Plan Isn't Working (Part 3 of 3)
You have a behavior plan that is more concrete and specific with a “short distance” between behavior and reward, you’ve framed your statements to be more positive, and you’ve upped the labeled praises. But your behavior plan still is not working!
Why Your Behavior Plan Isn't Working (Part 2 of 3)
Now that we have a behavior plan that is concrete and specific with a “short distance” between behavior and reward, what else can we do to improve the likelihood of our behavior plan’s success?
Why Your Behavior Plan Isn't Working (Part 1 of 3)
Parents and teachers, often with the guidance of a counselor or psychologist, build and implement behavior modification plans, or behavior plans.
You use these plans to help your child learn to stay on task, follow instructions, and, ultimately, succeed academically and socially. Unfortunately, despite your best efforts, your plan is failing and your child’s undesired behaviors have not changed - or are actually increasing!
Before you throw in the towel, here is the first of three reasons why you might be struggling.
Progress vs. Meaningful Progress: Why Knowing the Difference Makes All the Difference
Your child (we'll call him Dylan) has special needs. For example, let's say he has dyslexia. At the beginning of the third grade, Dylan was reading at an early kindergarten level. Now, at the end of the third grade, he’s reading at a late kindergarten level.
ADHD is NOT a Disorder of Attention
A disorder of attention occurs when an individual suffers a traumatic brain injury that leaves him or her incapable of attending to an object, person, conversation, game, or anything. If you’re reading this article, that description likely does not describe your child or student.