Special Education Report Roundup

Students With ADHD

“Predictors of Receipt of School Services in a National Sample of Youth With ADHD”
By Christina A. Samuels — March 11, 2019 1 min read
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A substantial percentage of students with ADHD symptoms severe enough to affect them both academically and socially are not getting support in school for the disorder, says a study of nearly 2,500 children and youth.

Parents of children who had been diagnosed with ADHD by a physician were asked in 2014 to describe their childrens’ symptoms and what interventions, if any, they were getting.

Sixty-nine percent of parents said their children were receiving one or more school services related to their ADHD, which might include enrollment in special education, tutoring, extra help from a teacher, preferential seating, or extra time to complete work. About a third said their children received “classroom management” interventions, such as a reward system or a daily report card.

But that left a notable percentage of students with impairing symptoms getting no interventions, said lead author George DuPaul, a professor of school psychology and the associate dean for research in the college of education at Lehigh University.

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A version of this article appeared in the March 13, 2019 edition of Education Week as Students With ADHD

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