Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For a kid like this your #1 tool and natural consequence is the phone time. He probably cares about it and it’s also very likely a root cause of getting the work done.
In my experience for ADHD teen, natural consequence parenting did not work. You need to work with what you have - not what you wish you had.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP said in a follow up that the kid DID know he would lose this trip.
Oh, I didn't see that. I actually still can't find it but if op gave the kid a clear ultimatum and he still didn't do the work, then I'm 100% behind the parents here.
She said he was told weekend plans would be affected and it sounds like there are many weekend plans.
Anonymous wrote:For a kid like this your #1 tool and natural consequence is the phone time. He probably cares about it and it’s also very likely a root cause of getting the work done.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have to go online everyday and look at what assignment is due for my 15 year old with adhd and make a color coded check off list in order to prioritize what is due first.
Work often isn’t completed unless I sit next to him. I am sometimes reading or doing a nyt puzzle so I am not staring at him but I am there when he gets too off task. He also then can take a quick break to talk about random things he thinks of or he will help solve on of the puzzles then gets back to work.
My goal right now is for him to graduate so some homework assignments I help him with short cuts. So sometimes instead of reading a very long chapter of a novel or history text, I can often find YouTube short documentaries /summaries or I read it aloud to him and we talk about it.
I also am realistic about his classes. He is smart enough to be in all honors classes but he can’t handle that workload and/or the rigidity of some honors teachers. It helps I have an older child so I know or his sibling tells him which teachers are more manageable with the work load.
Serious question is the plan for a kid like this they don’t go to college?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP said in a follow up that the kid DID know he would lose this trip.
Oh, I didn't see that. I actually still can't find it but if op gave the kid a clear ultimatum and he still didn't do the work, then I'm 100% behind the parents here.
Anonymous wrote:OP said in a follow up that the kid DID know he would lose this trip.
Anonymous wrote:I’d like to think you handled this situation very well and I also would have held my ground and taken away the ski trip.
What I want to know is, did it work? Let us know in a few days to a week if he is doing his homework and behaving better?
Usually, I find that holding kids accountable and following through with actions gets into their ‘decision cycle’ and it works. I find that when I do not enforce consequences, the worse the behavior becomes.
Let us know if your firm stance worked?
Good luck!