Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t really understand what you’re asking bc they’re entirely different scenarios. Medicating for ADHD is treating a condition that otherwise might block performance and prevent accurate measure of intellect (I say might bc not all ppl with ADHD will perform differently w/ meds). Prepping is cheating by training for the test and artificially raising score.
Prepping for any kind of test is not cheating. More craziness.
Prepping for a school subject like math, English, science etc. is not cheating. That’s called studying. Prepping for intelligence tests, like WISC or prepping for cogat/NNAT is absolutely cheating.
Can you please provide a reputable source that corroborates that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question makes no sense to me. Prepping will not necessarily help a kid with ADHD the point is that they can't focus during the test and no prep will help with that. Medication is the most helpful thing for most with ADHD. If you are worried it is impacting your child, medication not prepping and stressing them out is the choice in my opinion.
If the kid has a hard time focusing, it may help to know what’s coming, in general terms, and relax and help themselves focus.
Everyone will lose focus if a task proves undoable. The point is how much will preping help a person continue to try?
This is another post that shows you don't have a clue about ADHD.
If they are talking about their kid and not some hypothetical, I'm sad for that kid and all the self-esteem/anxiety issues they will likely develop or have developed.
So do you suggest meditation?
Do you know the long term effects of medication?
Heart disease
High blood pressure
Seizure
Irregular heartbeat
Abuse and addiction
Skin discolorations
https://www.webmd.com/add-adhd/long-term-risks-adhd-medications#:~:text=Side%20effects%20and%20risks%20associated,Seizure
You are more inclined to have those effects so you get a better performance, but you’re against prepping for better performance?!
I can play Google too. https://www.thetribune.ca/sci-tech/webmd-is-not-all-its-cracked-up-to-be-08112022/
I could also post numerous peer reviewed studies that show there are no proven long term side effects of medication but I'm not about getting into a citation war w/you. Go on with your anti-medication nuttery and allow your child to suffer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question makes no sense to me. Prepping will not necessarily help a kid with ADHD the point is that they can't focus during the test and no prep will help with that. Medication is the most helpful thing for most with ADHD. If you are worried it is impacting your child, medication not prepping and stressing them out is the choice in my opinion.
If the kid has a hard time focusing, it may help to know what’s coming, in general terms, and relax and help themselves focus.
Everyone will lose focus if a task proves undoable. The point is how much will preping help a person continue to try?
This is another post that shows you don't have a clue about ADHD.
If they are talking about their kid and not some hypothetical, I'm sad for that kid and all the self-esteem/anxiety issues they will likely develop or have developed.
So do you suggest meditation?
Do you know the long term effects of medication?
Heart disease
High blood pressure
Seizure
Irregular heartbeat
Abuse and addiction
Skin discolorations
https://www.webmd.com/add-adhd/long-term-risks-adhd-medications#:~:text=Side%20effects%20and%20risks%20associated,Seizure
You are more inclined to have those effects so you get a better performance, but you’re against prepping for better performance?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question makes no sense to me. Prepping will not necessarily help a kid with ADHD the point is that they can't focus during the test and no prep will help with that. Medication is the most helpful thing for most with ADHD. If you are worried it is impacting your child, medication not prepping and stressing them out is the choice in my opinion.
If the kid has a hard time focusing, it may help to know what’s coming, in general terms, and relax and help themselves focus.
Everyone will lose focus if a task proves undoable. The point is how much will preping help a person continue to try?
This is another post that shows you don't have a clue about ADHD.
If they are talking about their kid and not some hypothetical, I'm sad for that kid and all the self-esteem/anxiety issues they will likely develop or have developed.
So do you suggest meditation?
Do you know the long term effects of medication?
Heart disease
High blood pressure
Seizure
Irregular heartbeat
Abuse and addiction
Skin discolorations
https://www.webmd.com/add-adhd/long-term-risks-adhd-medications#:~:text=Side%20effects%20and%20risks%20associated,Seizure
You are more inclined to have those effects so you get a better performance, but you’re against prepping for better performance?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question makes no sense to me. Prepping will not necessarily help a kid with ADHD the point is that they can't focus during the test and no prep will help with that. Medication is the most helpful thing for most with ADHD. If you are worried it is impacting your child, medication not prepping and stressing them out is the choice in my opinion.
If the kid has a hard time focusing, it may help to know what’s coming, in general terms, and relax and help themselves focus.
Everyone will lose focus if a task proves undoable. The point is how much will preping help a person continue to try?
This is another post that shows you don't have a clue about ADHD.
If they are talking about their kid and not some hypothetical, I'm sad for that kid and all the self-esteem/anxiety issues they will likely develop or have developed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t really understand what you’re asking bc they’re entirely different scenarios. Medicating for ADHD is treating a condition that otherwise might block performance and prevent accurate measure of intellect (I say might bc not all ppl with ADHD will perform differently w/ meds). Prepping is cheating by training for the test and artificially raising score.
Prepping for any kind of test is not cheating. More craziness.
Prepping for a school subject like math, English, science etc. is not cheating. That’s called studying. Prepping for intelligence tests, like WISC or prepping for cogat/NNAT is absolutely cheating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question makes no sense to me. Prepping will not necessarily help a kid with ADHD the point is that they can't focus during the test and no prep will help with that. Medication is the most helpful thing for most with ADHD. If you are worried it is impacting your child, medication not prepping and stressing them out is the choice in my opinion.
If the kid has a hard time focusing, it may help to know what’s coming, in general terms, and relax and help themselves focus.
Everyone will lose focus if a task proves undoable. The point is how much will preping help a person continue to try?
This is another post that shows you don't have a clue about ADHD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t really understand what you’re asking bc they’re entirely different scenarios. Medicating for ADHD is treating a condition that otherwise might block performance and prevent accurate measure of intellect (I say might bc not all ppl with ADHD will perform differently w/ meds). Prepping is cheating by training for the test and artificially raising score.
Prepping for any kind of test is not cheating. More craziness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Prepping is not cheating. Everyone should be prepping and the tests should accommodate or be resilient to that. Tests that can't are just bad tests (very common).
It's impossible to police accidental "prepping" in the form of *educating a child*.
Some people are very defensive/competitive about medication. If medication improves quality of life and doesn't cause harm, it is "treating" some "condition", regardless of what the constnatly changing DSM says.
Sorry, but you're wrong. Studying for a test at school is fine. Prepping for a test is cheating. No one "studies" for the Cogat, they already know it's against the rules, they just think the rules don't apply to them, or that if they didn't get caught, then they are justified and all the rest are rubes. In the US, that's not our culture. It's not something to be proud of or to brag about.
Against which rules? Can you please provide the rules?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question makes no sense to me. Prepping will not necessarily help a kid with ADHD the point is that they can't focus during the test and no prep will help with that. Medication is the most helpful thing for most with ADHD. If you are worried it is impacting your child, medication not prepping and stressing them out is the choice in my opinion.
If the kid has a hard time focusing, it may help to know what’s coming, in general terms, and relax and help themselves focus.
Everyone will lose focus if a task proves undoable. The point is how much will preping help a person continue to try?
Anonymous wrote:I don’t really understand what you’re asking bc they’re entirely different scenarios. Medicating for ADHD is treating a condition that otherwise might block performance and prevent accurate measure of intellect (I say might bc not all ppl with ADHD will perform differently w/ meds). Prepping is cheating by training for the test and artificially raising score.
Anonymous wrote:The point is: if the child could benefit from medication, but you don’t want to give medication, while at the same time you want them to access the curriculum, why not prep instead of giving in to medication? Adhd can mask the iq of affected people by as much as 15+ points.
If the adhd is not holding them back as far as iq, and a test like WISC is hard to ‘game’, what’s the harm?
Anonymous wrote:This question is inspired by an answer on another thread, where kid scored so much higher after on medication.
What if you don’t give medication but do some ‘prepping’, wouldn’t that be the same?
The reasoning I’m using is that if adhd is stopping performance, and adhd is the real reason for this lower performance, why not do some prepping to remediate that? If you’re against meditation that is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This question makes no sense to me. Prepping will not necessarily help a kid with ADHD the point is that they can't focus during the test and no prep will help with that. Medication is the most helpful thing for most with ADHD. If you are worried it is impacting your child, medication not prepping and stressing them out is the choice in my opinion.
If the kid has a hard time focusing, it may help to know what’s coming, in general terms, and relax and help themselves focus.
Everyone will lose focus if a task proves undoable. The point is how much will preping help a person continue to try?