this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2023
7 points (88.9% liked)
ADHD UK
216 readers
1 users here now
General discussion and support for ADHD in the UK.
RULES
- Follow the instance rules (tl;dr be nice)
- No NSFW content
- Discussion about medication is allowed but don't take medical advice from internet strangers. Speak to your doctor or specialist.
- No recommendations for "alternative therapies" or anything illegal under UK law.
- No links to content which could be considered as glamourising ADHD.
- Cited/linked information should be from reliable sources. "Reliable" will be judged by the community.
- The length of any bans will be arbitrary and subject to however the mod is feeling at the time.
Not affiliated with r/ADHDUK or the charity ADHD UK
Other ADHD Communities:
Other resources:
r/ADHDUK FAQ - A great resource for information on ADHD
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Hey! First of all, I truly appreciate the fact that you are trying to improve yourself as a teacher and not blame them. I used to be a teacher for 8 years and I think I have some tips and tricks.
Communication: try to talk to them using the see think wonder method. That provides feedback to them in a way that is respectful and without blame. I see that you are talking when I am talking. I think something is wrong; either I am boring or the lesson isn't engaging enough. I wonder how I can help. Something like that. Be vulnerable and sincere, you'll be fine, just remember to use 'I' and not 'you'. You told us they're good students. So they must have good intentions.
Lesson plan: say you have 15 min of reading or 20 of explaining. Try to divide that into shorter stints with the appropriate follow-ups of course.. That keeps the flow going for them and doesn't give them time to wander off in their minds.
Hope this helps a bit! Good luck and remember we're all people who want a good connection.
Thanks for the reply and the compliments haha.
Any advice is helpful at this point. I worked in my sector for over 10 years and was randomly offered a teaching role, so in the grand scheme of things I'm brand new to it. I can pretty much guarantee I'm not as engaging as I may be in the future but I can't let my downfalls become their problem.
See think wonder, I like it. Easy to remember and puts the responsibility onto me, while (at least I think) also making them aware of their disruptions.