What it is
	  
An area of student need, involving difficulty with maintaining concentration, especially on non-preferred activities, while ignoring distractions.
Teaching Strategies
	
	
Instructional
	•	Provide frequent physical breaks; avoid long periods of sitting or being physically inactive.  One strategy could be to ask the student to collect/distribute materials.
•	Set up a cueing system, when you will be calling upon or asking something of the student.  For example, say, “I will stand beside you, and when I do this, this will let you know that the next question is for you.” Or: “You will always be the next person I ask a question of, after I ask Student A.” (focuses student’s listening).
•	Give specific instructions with a check list for the student to check off when each item is finished.
•	Alternate between sitting/less engaging and active classroom tasks.
•	Provide a “leadership” role for the student in class, so that he or she is responsible for repeating instructions or writing them on the board.
•	Give few instructions at a time, use numbering/cueing system for instructions: “First you, second, you and third you.” / “First… and then…” / “Do-A, then-B and finally-C.”
•	Use graphic organizers for the student to collect or interpret information.
•	Chunk assignments into parts and provide feedback when each step is finished.
•	Post the daily schedule and review it with the whole class.
•	Explicitly teach organizational strategies.
•	Teach social skill lessons to the student and/or small group on appropriately asking for help in the classroom, for instructions to be repeated/rephrased, completing work, etc.
•	Consider the development of an alternative programming page for the student’s Individual Education Plan (IEP).
•	Communicate regularly with parents/guardians and focus on positive behaviours.
•	Reward on-task behaviours.
•	Use a timer for the student to self monitor the amount of on-task behaviour.
•	Allow the student to earn a reward for a set amount of on-task behaviour.
•	Use differentiated teaching methods frequently, with various media forms.
•	Have the student use a computer with text to speech for reading.
•	Have the student use a computer with speech to text for writing activities.
•	Use a colour coding system for organization and/or learning activities.
•	Use various technology tools, so the student can better follow the lesson.
•	Provide a list of tasks that need to be accomplished during a set period, and allow the student to choose the order, or alternate between activities.
•	In consultation with the student, develop a non-verbal signal for the teacher to give him/her to redirect behaviour.
•	Consider referral to the school board speech and language and/or psychology staff.
Less...
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Environmental
	•	Post simple and action-focused rules and consequences.
•	Use preferential seating to reduce distractions for the student.
•	Provide a choice of work areas for the student to move between in the classroom.
•	Provide for the student to take a physical break (delivering material to another class or to the office).
•	Consider the use of music and headphones if it helps the student to concentrate.
•	Provide items that a student can physically manipulate (stress ball, chewing gum).
	
Assessment
	•	Provide choice in assessment activities, including use of various media forms.
•	Use oral tests.
•	Chunk tests/assignments.
•	Allow breaks during tests (consider giving the student only one page of a multiple page test, with a walk break or other suitable break prior to receiving the next page).
•	Use a variety of methods on written tests (short answer, matching, fill in the blank, long answer).
•	Provide printed assignment requirements and rubrics.
•	Provide an alternate testing location that is more free of distractions.
•	Prompt the student to return to task if he/she seems to be off task.
•	Allow additional time.
Resources
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|  | Organized by age range. | 




 
      	  

