Smart but scattered The revolutionary "executive skills" approach to helping kids reach their potential

Peg Dawson

Book - 2009

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649.1/Dawson
1 / 2 copies available
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2nd Floor 649.1/Dawson Due May 23, 2024
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Subjects
Published
New York, NY : Guilford Press c2009.
Language
English
Main Author
Peg Dawson (-)
Other Authors
Richard Guare (-)
Physical Description
vi, 314 p. : ill. ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781593854454
9781593859879
  • Introduction
  • I. What Makes Your Child Smart But Scattered
  • 1. How Did Such a Smart Kid End Up So Scattered?
  • 2. Identifying Your Child's Strengths and Weaknesses
  • 3. How Your Own Executive Strengths and Weaknesses Matter
  • 4. Matching the Child to the Task
  • II. Laying a Foundation That Can Help
  • 5. Ten Principles for Improving Your Child's Executive Skills
  • 6. Modifying the Environment:AIs forAntecedent
  • 7. Teaching Executive Skills Directly:BIs forBehavior
  • 8. Motivating Your Child to Learn and Use Executive Skills:CIs forConsequence
  • III. Putting It All Together
  • 9. Advance Organizer
  • 10. Ready-Made Plans for Teaching Your Child to Complete Daily Routines
  • 11. Building Response Inhibition
  • 12. Enhancing Working Memory
  • 13. Improving Emotional Control
  • 14. Strengthening Sustained Attention
  • 15. Teaching Task Initiation
  • 16. Promoting Planning and Prioritizing
  • 17. Fostering Organization
  • 18. Instilling Time Management
  • 19. Encouraging Flexibility
  • 20. Increasing Goal-Directed Persistence
Review by Library Journal Review

Two groundbreaking guides explore a burgeoning parenting topic. Executive functioning/executive skills are a series of cognitive skills that regulate behavior and help accomplish tasks, e.g., impulse and emotional control or planning and organizing work. When these skills are weak, children's behavior can be frustrating and vexing for parents who show strength in the particular skills with which their child struggles. Both guides emphasize children's nonperformance as caused by inability, and both illustrate how to improve functioning. Clinical psychologists Cooper-Kahn and Dietzel offer a practical approach through detailed explanations, explorations of causes and effects, and strengthening techniques. Especially helpful are a professional assessment how-to and abundant tips for advocacy at school. Using a similar tack, Dawson, a psychologist, and Guare, a neuropsychologist, follow up on their clinician-specific Executive Skills in Children and Adolescents, with more compassionate and parent-friendly results. They include age-specific questionnaires to assess skills in both child and parent and focus on the fit between children's and their parents' strengths and weaknesses in skill-building techniques and daily living. Notable are several useful checklists and a clear framework for intervention. While both titles include resource lists and clinical examples, Dawson and Guare's personal anecdotes lend immediacy. They also provide lists of toys and games to promote skill development and several relevant web sites. Overall, Smart but Scattered is the more comprehensive, accessible, and hopeful title. Donna Goldberg and Jennifer Zwiebel's The Organized Student: Teaching Children the Skills for Success in School and Beyond showed the tip of the iceberg, and other books devoted exclusively to Asperger's syndrome or ADHD cater to a specific audience. As the first books on the subject to speak directly, comprehensively, and universally to parents, both titles are recommended for parenting collections in public and school libraries; Dawson and Guare's work should be considered essential.-Shawna Thorup, Fayetteville P.L., AR (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.