Anonymous wrote:Our son is a freshman in HS with ADHD. He’s very bright but definitely needs help with time management and study skills now that rigor and workload have increased.
What EF skills, study habits etc have helped your kid to do well in college or what was lacking that hindered your child as they transitioned to college? I ask as we are hiring an EF coach and am curious what we want to make sure is in place/what we need to build on over these four years?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Introduce the concept of studying-as-you-learn. Learn something new in class? Come home & review/quiz yourself on it (AI can be used to make quizzes). And, if possible, gently go over things before they are covered in class so if you have questions, you can ask them then. This way, if you’ve forgotten a test or your time management slipped & you didn’t have time to study, the results are not catastrophic.
So. Many. Timer. And alarms. And figure out a way to keep track of due dates that works for your kid (mine uses the calendar on his phone with various reminders)
Body doubling for study time.
These are accurate, pretty much map to what we are doing now.
I am deeply concerned about body double. Once they are in college, that won’t be there. We seriously don’t know how she would do without that.
In my experience it was much easier to find a body double in college than at any other time in life. Literally hundreds of peers around who also need to study. The key is tapping into a group that will help you stay focused and not totally distract. I actually had my best in-room studying the year I had a random roommate who I was friendly with but not besties. We were good at studying without too much extra chit chat.
I'll also recommend The Pomodoro Method. And make sure the breaks are off-line for a better recharge. Digital distractions after one of my biggest worries
Anonymous wrote:
Body doubling for study time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Introduce the concept of studying-as-you-learn. Learn something new in class? Come home & review/quiz yourself on it (AI can be used to make quizzes). And, if possible, gently go over things before they are covered in class so if you have questions, you can ask them then. This way, if you’ve forgotten a test or your time management slipped & you didn’t have time to study, the results are not catastrophic.
So. Many. Timer. And alarms. And figure out a way to keep track of due dates that works for your kid (mine uses the calendar on his phone with various reminders)
Body doubling for study time.
These are accurate, pretty much map to what we are doing now.
I am deeply concerned about body double. Once they are in college, that won’t be there. We seriously don’t know how she would do without that.
Anonymous wrote:
Body doubling for study time.
Anonymous wrote:Introduce the concept of studying-as-you-learn. Learn something new in class? Come home & review/quiz yourself on it (AI can be used to make quizzes). And, if possible, gently go over things before they are covered in class so if you have questions, you can ask them then. This way, if you’ve forgotten a test or your time management slipped & you didn’t have time to study, the results are not catastrophic.
So. Many. Timer. And alarms. And figure out a way to keep track of due dates that works for your kid (mine uses the calendar on his phone with various reminders)
Body doubling for study time.