Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Educator chiming in here. I’ve worked with thousands of kids over the years. No, it’s not uncommon to have kids this age get wound up or have “annoying energy.” It’s not exactly typical either. Over time this type of behavior does annoy peers, which causes some degree of social marginalization. It also tends to become a problem in the classroom.
Some kids learn social cues and self regulation strategies by observing others. It’s much the same way that some percent of kids are natural readers. Don’t assume that they’ll all just figure it out eventually. Target the behaviors that are most problematic and start teaching different ways of doing things. Then actively intervene with reminders, redirection, and consequences.
Anonymous wrote:Anyone else deal with this and do they grow out of it? my almost 7 year old is doing well at school, has never gotten really gotten into trouble before, is well liked and has a lot of friends but I find him to be a lot to handle. We did a play date today with a friend and he was so hyped up and just has the most annoying energy- running so fast, making annoying and silly faces, making a mess like breaking his plastic fork at lunch, just sooooo much energy and losing his mind with listening.. We deal with this a lot and have tried many things. It’s like a weird mood takes over. I would say it seems like he has aDHD but he holds it together most of the time at school. If your kid was like this at 6/7 did they eventually grow out of it and when? He’s just a lot anywhere I take him. He’s also the oldest. His little brother is much calmer but he will get all riled up when he’s with my older one.
Anonymous wrote:Totally normal for us, but my 7 year old does have diagnosed adhd. But I notice his friends who I think are NT have similar personalities, lots of silliness and lots of energy. They usually know how to dial it back before my son does though. Boys that age are a lot to handle.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:List all of the snacks that work for your energetic boy, please!
Anything, really.
Fruit. Cheese and crackers. Toast with pb. Greek yogurt and low sugar granola. Half of a PBJ. Pretzels and hummus. Carrot sticks. Trail mix.
My kid can’t or won’t eat half of these things.We’ve done feeding therapy to address extremely picky eating, but there are food restrictions in play as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:List all of the snacks that work for your energetic boy, please!
Anything, really.
Fruit. Cheese and crackers. Toast with pb. Greek yogurt and low sugar granola. Half of a PBJ. Pretzels and hummus. Carrot sticks. Trail mix.
Anonymous wrote:List all of the snacks that work for your energetic boy, please!