Schools get into the habit of teaching academic abilities rather than
social intelligence and avoid some important issues. Most children with
ADHD are oppositional, this is because they find it difficult to stop
and think through what is being asked of them. Students with ADHD are
easily bored, yet helpless to keep their minds on their tasks. They talk
and question excessively. ADHD children crave for attention and are very
tactile. Very often they will act before they think and interrupt
others. Children with ADHD experience easily stress, pressure, and
tiredness, which can weaken their self-control, leading to poor
behaviour. When they are upset, or when confronted in a heated
discussion, they explode with a burst of energy and aggression that is
far in excess to the situation. Many ADHD children admittedly experience
problems of a disorganised lifestyle. They have emotional difficulties
upon which they need structure. This book will enlighten and bring
better understanding of how to teach and support students with ADHD. It
will look at how schools handle students with ADHD and what structures
need to be in place in order to better teach them.