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Schooltime For Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

School can be hard for children with AD/HD. Success in school often means being able to pay attention and control behavior and impulse. These are the areas where children with AD/HD have trouble. Here are tips for teachers for helping kids learn.

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Dragonfly USA

6 Level Communicator With 1-8 Jacks

Note: Review only, product no longer for sale.

Innovative 6-Level Communicator Stores Up to 48 5-Second Messages.

This affordable communicator has the recording capacity for 48 5-second messages (8 messages on 6 levels.) Interchangeable picture cards slide behind the switchplate face. Activate each message by either plugging in external switches into the eight jacks on the rear of the communicator or by pressing one of the 2" squares. A switch on the back of the unit allows you to select the set of pre-recorded messages for each picture plate. Excellent for use as a communication device and as a teaching tool. Requires 4 "AA" Batteries.

R1401


6 Level Communicator With 1-8 Jacks

Typical Access Profile

Auditory

Normal
Low
Extremely Low
Not Using Hearing
Hyper-Acute

Vision

Normal
Low
Extremely Low
Not Using Vision

Gross Motor

All
Some
Few
Not Using Gross Motor

Fine Motor

All
Some
Few
Not Using Fine Motor

Developmental Age Range

0 - 2
3 - 5
6 - 8
9 - 12
13 and Over

Language

Typical
Some Spoken
Receptive Only
Sign
Assistive/Augmentitive
Not Using Language
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What Is It? Tactile Discrimination Game

Kinesthetic awareness is an important part of healthy sensory integration. Challenge your child to use the sense of touch only and identify different objects with the What Is It? Tactile Discrimination Game. Try dividing the objects by theme. Good examples are: objects from nature, dishes and cutlery, or grooming aids. To make the game easier, try offering fewer choices and supply a picture of the objects under the cover. Can your child tell the toothbrush from the hairbrush?

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