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Social Anxiety Always Needs Help and Grade Skipping Very Effective for Some Gifted Students
Social Anxiety Always Needs Help and Grade Skipping Very Effective for Some Gifted Students
Q: How do you know when social anxiety requires more attention (e.g. therapy or medication)?
A: A parent is often the first person who can help a socially …Read more.
Helping Over-Empowered High-School Students Is Not Easy
Q: My question is related to my role as a high-school teacher. I have my master's in special education with a concentration on students with emotional disabilities. I've taught for the last 15 years as either a special education or English teacher, …Read more.
When Should a Child be IQ Tested? and Death Is Frightening to Children
Q: At what point should IQ testing be conducted? We have an only child — a girl who is in kindergarten.
A: There's no specific time that all children should be given individual IQ tests by a psychologist. Schools often arrange for group IQ …Read more.
Grandson May be More Difficult During Grandma's Visit
Q: I'm concerned about my 2-year-old grandson who seems very needy and demanding. He cries for at least an hour after his mom leaves. Occasionally, distraction works but not often. He says, "It's mine" over and over about everything in his …Read more.
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Scare Tactic InsincereQ: We've threatened our underachiever with taking away private school and sending him to public school because of his poor effort. Is this a bad threat? We are at our wit's end. My husband said he won't take him out of the school, but we are trying to scare him into working harder. A: Your son undoubtedly knows that your scare tactic is insincere, so he may even be testing you to see how far he can push you. It's all right for parents to remind kids they've invested a lot in their private school education and they expect an equal investment of effort from their children. At least that reminder won't threaten them with something you don't plan to follow through on. If your son is underachieving in an excellent private school, he probably needs an evaluation and counseling to help determine the cause of his underachievement. You could discover a learning disability, an attention problem or underachievement that comes from poor self-confidence. Sometimes children underachieve as part of sibling rivalry — feeling as if they can't do as well as a sibling can discourage them from putting forth effort. Other times, children do poorly because they're competitive with classmates and feel like even if they worked hard, they couldn't do well. Most crucial to turning around underachievers is discovering academic strengths that get them excited enough to truly work hard. The discovery that hard work really can make a difference in their accomplishments can inspire them to take on other challenges. Underachievers may get into problem patterns if (1) adults have done too much for them in the past or if (2) they've been given so many choices early — they believe they should be allowed to choose what they will do, and sometimes they refuse to do what they are assigned because they haven't made the choice.
For free newsletters about "From Overempowerment to Underachievement," learning disabilities or ADHD, send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the address below. Dr. Sylvia B. Rimm is the director of the Family Achievement Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, a clinical professor of psychiatry and pediatrics at the Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, and the author of many books on parenting. More information on raising kids is available at www.sylviarimm.com. Please send questions to: Sylvia B. Rimm on Raising Kids, P.O. Box 32, Watertown, WI 53094 or srimm@sylviarimm.com. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate website at www.creators.com. COPYRIGHT 2010 CREATORS.COM
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