Recently Debbie Reber interviewed me about Executive Function on her podcast, TILT Parenting. This is my favorite parenting podcast and I recommend subscribing.
Freebie: Here’s the free PDF assessment mentioned in the last show with Debbie: Executive Function Assessment. This assessment explores the most important aspects of your child’s executive function in an easy to understand format. It will give you clarity regarding your child’s executive function and how it affects them in school and life. It also has helpful tips.
About Debbie Reber & the TILT podcast
TiLT Parenting was founded in 2016 by author, speaker, coach, and most importantly, parent of an atypical kid, Debbie Reber as a podcast and online community aimed at helping parents raising differently-wired kids do so from a place of confidence, connection, and joy. Debbie is passionate about the idea that being differently-wired isn’t a deficit —it’s a difference. She hopes to change the way difference is perceived and experienced in the world so these exceptional kids, and the parents raising them, can thrive in their schools, in their families, and in their lives.
The TiLT Parenting Podcast is in the iTunes top 20 in Kids & Family, and regularly features high-profile parenting experts and educators, as well as insightful conversations between Debbie and her 13-year-old son Asher. Debbie’s book inspired by TiLT Parenting, DIFFERENTLY WIRED: Raising an Extraordinary Child in a Conventional World, comes out in Spring 2018. You can visit Debbie’s main homepage here (This particular link has info on her new book!)
THINGS YOU’LL LEARN FROM THIS NEW EPISODE:
Seth’s definition of executive functioning framed so it helps people apply the principles to help kids
A step-by-step breakdown of exactly how Seth works with families
Why our relationship with our child is the number one thing to be preserved when doing this work
The importance of parents doing their own personal work / self-care during this process
Why kids “can’t do what we’re asking them to do because they can’t, not because they won’t,” so we need to back up and scaffold from where they’re at
The role of mindfulness, mindset, and motivation
Why symptoms are more important than labels
Why it’s critical to understand the role of emotional regulation in executive functioning
How we as parents can co-regulate our emotions with our child
Why we want to focus on 3 positives for every 1 negative
What “Frankenstudy” is, and how to know where to focus your energies so you can create a “domino effect” with your child’s fledgling executive functioning skills
How to best use “learning planners” to learn how to think / talk through their plan (and what we’re doing wrong)
The benefits of monthly planners versus daily or weekly planners
Helping kids identify the “MIT” – most important thing – each day
The importance of creating a sacred study space for a child
How to optimize an internet browser to make it easy with bookmark bars (and have tabs automatically open, including calendar, grade tab, email)
Why it’s important to get kids to start checking grades weekly (Seth recommends Sunday nights)
The importance of helping a child create clearly identified routines (for leaving house, doing daily plan, doing homework, etc.)
How getting visual with kids benefits them in developing their executive functioning skills
Why separate digital timers need to be a part of a child’s life so they can learn to calibrate time, as well as get started and do short bursts of work
Creating a weekly overhaul of systems
The important of kids “getting into the mode” for studying, etc: organize their space, make their plan, and executive
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Reading the transcript? Great! We’re currently uploading hundreds of transcripts so you can read them asap, but they are NOT all edited yet. This is a big process. If you notice anything wrong and want to help us, feel free to click this Google Form to share it. Thanks so much for pitching in! – Seth
Video transcript:
Good morning. What’s up? What’s up? What’s up? Throw it out, So I’m going to talk about the purpose of Education. I always talk about this because I think it’s such you know, when you when you’re talkin about what kids need it so important to really reflect and stop and say what are we doing here in the first place? Because a lot of times you just get caught up in Creek elem in in in jumping through hoops in in bureaucratic necessities and things like that that would kind of lose track of what we’re doing fine. Like it back up to. What is the purpose. What are we doing here? So I also like to think about what I’m talking about the purpose of Education where does this word come from the etymology and it comes from the Latin educada and I didn’t mean to raise or to bring forth or to bring forward and when we think about the word that we use when we talk about our kids we bring up our kids we raise our kids. Why do we say we raise our kids we bring up our kids because we are bringing them up to be able to have a happy and successful adult life. That’s the point of it. We want to raise them to that point now used to be that when they were 18, they graduate in the ready for life. They graduate high school with the skills. They need to have a group of the afterlife obviously not like that anymore. So We need to raise them or bring them up have a happy and successful life made a very very different world. That’s the purpose of Education. Well that makes it a lot easier to then ask the question. Are we meeting at purpose are these kids getting what they need? And as you can see people really struggle to be adults in this world. They struggle financially they struggle with responsibility. They are not ready at 18 or after high school or college to launch their life. They say that now at 11 to last till they’re there about 30 years old. Does the much longer adolescent life. So really need to think what do they need in this world? And is it okay to providing it? And if it isn’t, how are we going to get them what they need, so I have those help with you and I hope you have a great week. Take care.
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To support me, please CLICK at the bottom to share. Click here to visit my official YouTube Channel & subscribe if you want! Thank you — Seth
Reading the transcript? Great! We’re currently uploading hundreds of transcripts so you can read them asap, but they are NOT all edited yet. This is a big process. If you notice anything wrong and want to help us, feel free to click this Google Form to share it. Thanks so much for pitching in! – Seth
Video transcript:
Put on this is stop. Perler.com. And I thought I’d spend some time today telling you a little bit about why I left the teaching profession. So what happened to me was that I I was a horrible student as a child and literally in first grade my report card started having negative comments like that. I was lazy or wasn’t trying hard enough or wasn’t applying myself or whatever and I didn’t know nobody knew at the time that I had on them and it’s in a type ADHD or that there is anything going on that I was struggling with and so what happened was that year after year after year, I struggled more and more in school and I started getting tested for learning disabilities in 8th grade and they found out that I didn’t have learning disabilities. At least that’s what they thought cuz they didn’t know about ADHD or anyting but they found out that I was gifted and talented so really made my parents and teachers especially confused about why is this kid not doing well, why is he not perform? Why is he not cheating things like that? And so I was confused too. I didn’t I didn’t know what was going on. But I was the student who really was a struggling student and I did not feel successful in school and I did not feel rewarded by school. The funny thing is is that I absolutely positively believe in the power of Education to help us launch great future that in order for us to have a great future the key is education now whether or not that education takes place in a school or it’s the School of Hard Knocks her and any other form of Education there many many many many many ways that we can learn that we can become educated doesn’t matter. But the point is is that in order for us to be able to go for our hopes and dreams. We have to have some sort of Education that empowers us. So anyhow, I go through a growth through middle school. I go through high school. I don’t do very well. I go to college on probation I end up failing at a college. So I started about the university and I Tell that at Ball State University because I didn’t know how to be a student that didn’t matter how I’ve been matter if I was right or not. I didn’t know how to be a student there. And then I went to a community college in Columbus, Ohio and I dropped out after two quarters before failing out because I was about to fail out of that one and I just really felt hopeless. So before I tell you why I left teaching them tell me a little bit about how I got to be a teacher in the first place. So anyhow, I started working with kids by accident after failing out of the after failing out of college and then dropping out of college. I didn’t know what I wanted to do, but I knew I wanted to turn my life around and make something of myself and I just got this job working with kids and I absolutely fell in love with it. I found meaning in it. I found that I was good at it and one day after 6 months of working at this place in Indianapolis working with kids from kindergarten to 5th grade one day. I was driving home and I’m driving down the street in indianapolis this Curry Street call. Spring Mill Road Indianapolis IN may I have this little white Mazda 3 2-3 stick shift and I’m driving a long hair tie. My hair is blowing in the wind and I’m smiling driving home. And I realize that that this was meaningful to me and that I wanted to work with kids with us my life. Literally that was a very rare moment of my life. I’ve had maybe ten of them but that was a game pigeon moment of my life where I said, you know what I’m dedicating the rest of my life to the service of kids. I’m going to dinner McKay my life to helping these human beings that have a better life. So then I proceeded to try to get back in the college and I got back in the couch when I was 25 right now all my peers in college. I went back to become a teacher at the time. I decided that I would serve his going to become a teacher and I got back into any Indiana University and all my peers. I was 25 24 25, they were all 18 19 20, you know, and so is very a very interesting time for you, but I was there on a mission I knew what I was there I had a little bit more maturity in the sense that I was very mission-driven and I always have been mission-driven. So anyhow, I go through college I end up as student teaching on the Navajo Indian reservation. And then I ended up starting my teaching career on the Navajo Indian Reservation. Now you should know that my purpose for teaching was to be of service was to serve Humanity was to be helpful to Children was to help them have a great life was not help him get good test scores is not help them get good grades. It was to inspire them. It was to help them fall in love with education because my education felt so bad. It was very important to me to help these students really shine really have a great life. So from day one, I was always very focused on the purpose of Education, which I think a lot of times gets clouded as teachers are going through their career. They lose sight of the purpose. They lose sight of why they started In the first place and I just happened to never have lost sight of them. Well, I was very lucky in a lot of ways with my teaching experiences because I got to teach him a Navajo Indian reservation. And this is a place that a lot of people would say all I would never want to do that because I had no resources. We have no money. We had no textbooks. We had virtually no crank alone. We had a pink stacks of papers that were the Arizona standards have the time and pretty much designed my Cricket him and to me that was one of the biggest blessings in my entire teaching career was that I’m since we really didn’t have much I had to creatively designed thing and synthes kids. I had kids in 5th grade when I was in the Navajo Indian reservation. I have kids in 5th grade that were reading it like the kindergarten level and some that were reading in the 7th grade level. So I had this huge huge gap of of ability levels in all subject areas for my 5th graders. So I really had and I didn’t ask since I hadn’t Before that I really didn’t know I didn’t have any background to know what what it was like on the places. So I just felt free to be creative and to create curriculum that would be engaging and Thursday. I feel that the number one most important thing for a teacher to do as a as they’re teaching their kids has to be engaging us to create engaging curriculum. I call it creatively differentiated curriculum. That’s my own term that I like to use that describes how I design curriculum creatively differentiated curriculum. But that’s not what usually happens. Now. I do think that’s the number one most important word is engagement. But I think the number one most important thing for teachers to do in order to empower their kids to be engaged. They have to create emotional safety first. So to me, it takes the first 48 weeks of school to create an environment of emotional safety. We’re students know that they are safe to learn because if they don’t feel safe with the teacher, they’re not going to be able to learn and I obviously I get Suits now I practice who don’t feel emotionally safe around their teachers and they were all the shut down to see my teacher hates me things like this. So creating an emotionally safe environment for students is absolutely key at my pain is right now I taught for 12 years. I taught in the Navajo Indian Reservation. I taught in Mexico and an Arizona. I ended up teaching in Colorado. I taught in Thornton Colorado with a primarily Hispanic middle school and I taught in a gift and talented School in Colorado and a different gift and talented school does primarily for to eat kids and in a very and in a another School in Colorado, that was a very structured School in a very linear type of environment. So I don’t know all these different environments and had all these different experiences with Math Science Social Studies Reading Writing teaching all these subjects. I also started a creative writing camp for kids. And I also I got to teach preschool special education 3rd grade fifth grade 6th grade 7th grade 8th grade. And so I had all these wonderful different experiences and in some of the school environment that I taught in. I had a lot of freedom again with curriculum and being able to design things that were creative and that were engaging and I also taught in situations where it was very driven by by standards by testing by data and where there was not a lot of creativity or thought about how to make it interesting or engaging but more about how do we jump through the Hoops that were expected to jump through sew-in in those type of educational setting that have Todd and it was very stifling form. where I felt stuck and I felt like it was Richard and I felt like we were doing things that and that we’re just not necessarily in the best interest of kids either way all the different situations that I that I taught in have certain levels of dysfunction and that for me as somebody who came from place where I was a kid who almost out of high school failed out of college felt like crap about myself as a student from first grade on felt different. I had a lot of consequences. I was grounded a lot. I had a teacher saying things about me that I was lazy or that I didn’t try or that I didn’t care of things like this and I took a lot of that shame on I had to work through that stuff as an adult but being in schools where there is dysfunctional stuff going on in the teachers lounge or with certain teachers in the school or the way that Administration Dallas teachers or they’ve waited Administration dealt with families. I won the school’s I was that we had seven or eight different administrators in Seven years, I believe and every time you have a new administrator the whole culture of the school is shifted is just there was some very disruptive things and while I was trying to be of service to students. I kept running up against these experiences where I felt like the dysfunction that I was seeing was interfering with my ability to serve and I believe that it interfered with other teachers ability to serve see because I perceived teaching as an art and a science and I think that the standardization movement standardized test the fact that we still use letter grades even though it’s 2018 and letter grades or way archaic an outdated and many many many many other things that I think are just very outdated and not optimal for learning. I’m still go on those things really really frustrated me at a very deep level. I felt that other teachers were not empowered. Like I said, I believe it’s in Art and Science and I think that teachers are Craftsman their craftspeople. They have a craft and art and their job is to develop their craft do with a masters of their craft. Yeah, when we tell teachers, you’ve got to follow this Creek on this way, you’ve got to follow this prescription and then schools will change the curriculum and different subject areas every few years, since they just kidding now we’re going to use this Creek on this is the new latest and greatest. I think that that this empowers Patriots. I think that it D professionalize has to clear Over 50% of teachers leave by year five. This is an astounding in depressing statistic to me teachers are so burned out by year five that they leave something that they spent at least four years in college in Summit went on to get a master’s and it’s been all this time in college all this money in college all this heart. I mean being a teacher is one of the hardest jobs you’ll ever do I think parenting is the hardest job you’ll ever do but being a teacher has won the hearts jobs, you’ll ever do your before-school people think you have Summers off. No teachers work during the summer good teachers work developing critical in prepping for the upcoming school year during the summer if they’re also recovering from the past school year and then they often get to school early. They work through their lunches that don’t have enough planning time. They work at home at night. They work on weekends and they’re doing this for the kids and they’re not paid what they deserve to be paid in my opinion and they’re not given the resources. They need etcetera etcetera. So anyhow, I was really struggling and suffering in terms of my own conscience. I was there to serve and I felt like I was being stifled. And I felt like other teachers in the system or not being empowered to build the craft. They were being told do what you’re told follow the creek elem fit in this box follow these rules and I think that I saw a lot of teacher burnout happen to a lot of teachers who are really suffering from just overwhelmed. They weren’t able to have the time for self-care that they needed while I did not get into teaching to Lose Myself and I was losing myself in it. I really didn’t have the time. I know if an order to serve my kids they didn’t have the time for myself Care Plus. I felt like my ability to survive if there was being stifled. So where is maybe my potential for services? Let’s say 100% I was at maybe 60% of my ability to serve because there is 40% of my energy was going to think that I did not believe impacted student named meaningful way. Some of the data collection that we were required to do some of the report that we were required to just suck. Some of the way that we are required to do grades. I memorize at one school we had these grade card report things that were supposed to be more simple, but they were pages and pages of a standard that we were supposed to determine how a kid was doing on so many different metrics and it took so much time to do those. I remember it took me about a week just to do the grades on on these things not including all the time that I’ve been prepping the grades throughout the entire semester. Anyhow, it was just stifling it. It’s like teachers are human beings. They need to have time for for self care for family time and stuff like that and time to develop engaging creative differentiated curriculum that’s going to meet the needs of a wide range of students. So I was getting burned out and I was getting really frustrated that I was there to serve and and I couldn’t do it it to the extent that I wanted to. So a couple years before I left teaching I started really thinking about how can I be of more service and who do I believe I was put here to serve and what I found for me is that my favorite students to serve were struggling students were students who had executive function issues were twice exceptional students gifted and talented students that were going to the packs really any student that was struggling. I enjoyed working with that was what I felt like with my thing. I love a challenge. I love helping them with their strengths are I love helping them move forward in life. I love helping them feel good about themselves and understand how awesome there. So that was what I gravitated towards that I started saying what how can I create something because I knew I didn’t just want to be like an ADHD coach because they felt felt that that was stifling in the ways that I saw it liked what I saw ADHD coaches doing was not what I wanted to be doing. I knew that I’m being a counselor. I considered becoming a counselor and I didn’t want to feel stifled and feel like I only have 50 minute sessions and I can be right in the middle of working with someone. I asked their clocks up. You have to go that wasn’t for me and I didn’t want to be a tutor and I didn’t want to be this map. But I I really wanted to hone my skills on serving who I felt like I was meant to serve and I’m doing their way that was meaningful and on being able to have powerful relationships with a family that I work with. I believe that I don’t just work with a student but that it work with a family and I wanted to create something where I could help the parents as well and I wanted to be open-ended and I want to be able to not be boxed into a certain type of student but really help families understand all types of different things that are that are important to understand if you’re really going to try to help your child for example, emotional regulation is huge for me. I’m social emotional education is huge for me exact your function, obviously. He is huge for me. All of these things that I really believe in being engaged and I am I’m in the unique position where I’m trying to help a student now my coaching practice. I’m trying to help students navigated system that isn’t built for their brain. So it’s a really complicated situation. Where an I don’t want to be in a career where I’m lying to my family. So I will I have created something where I’m able to come in soon. Yeah, I agree. That’s busy work. Yeah, you probably won’t use that for the rest your life, but we got to do it. Anyhow, how do we do it as painlessly as possible? How do you still balance your life doing that in it? But I’m having a problem solving these weights. Anyhow, I’ve been able to create something that that really was meaningful power for me. I’m in my eighth year of it. It’s been a lot of hard work feeding it but I want to make this video just to tell my story for anybody was interested on why I left teaching and just to put it in a nutshell at the end of this video. I was there to be a service and have a good life myself. And I felt like my ability to serve was compromised because of systemic dysfunction and I felt that my ability for self-care and having a good life that I deserved and the appropriate reward for the work in the service that I was bringing to my community. I was not able to achieve that in with the teacher salary in the amount of hours that that were required in order to do what they were asking us to do. So, I made that change it was very hard because I love teaching I love the art of teaching. I love connecting with students. I love changing lives. I love a challenge. I love inspiring them. I love engaging I love designing creatively differentiated crate come I love the whole ecosystem of working with the students. I didn’t love the system. And so after it’s sold leaving was very hard to sort of make that shift and say okay. I’m letting this go I’m done. I’m at my Wit’s End the last straw has happened and I’m going to make a shift and I’m going to create my own thing and see if I can do this and believe in what I believe in and follow my heart and create something that is really meaningful to me. So I did that and it worked fortunately but I so many teachers who leave teaching never set foot in a classroom again and never work with kids again, and it is such a shame majan 50% over 50% of teachers by year five. That’s it’s just incredible to me. They’re gone. They’re not working with kids anymore. We need these people so desperately but they’re still we’re not but they left. So anyhow, that’s my story about why I laughed if you haven’t subscribed to my YouTube channel, you can Clips click some stride right now, and it’ll Alert, if you want what every time I post a new video If you like this video and you want to respond, you can email it to me or leave a comment on YouTube or on the blog on Facebook or whatever, but I would love to hear what you think and what your experiences is a parent or teacher wherever you’re at or what your thoughts are. I’m very very very curious to hear from other people what your story is and and how you perceive my story and and what you think we can do about this because I do think that it can cancer most important job in the world and our kids. We are leaving them with a world problems that they are going to have a good they are going to have to have a good education in order to be the people who solve the problems that they are growing up with very complex problems. And I do not think we’re doing a good enough job prepping them for this world. But anyhow, what do you think about all the stuff? I love to hear it and thanks for listening to my story. Take care.
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A mom emailed me this:
Hi Seth, Do you have any information/insight you can share on getting teens to take ownership/buy-in?
I constantly bang my head against the wall as I try countless tools/techniques to make life easier/better for my teenage daughter. The one thing that is missing is the buy-in from her. I’ve come to the conclusion that I can continue to spend endless hours reading and searching for ideas that will benefit her but until I have her buy-in it’s all for not.
This is very frustrating as life doesn’t have to be this challenging for her. Any information would be appreciated.
Here are my insights and 6 ways to help.
Love my work and want to give? Click here!
To support me, please CLICK at the bottom to share. Click here to visit my official YouTube Channel & subscribe if you want! Thank you — Seth
Reading the transcript? Great! We’re currently uploading hundreds of transcripts so you can read them asap, but they are NOT all edited yet. This is a big process. If you notice anything wrong and want to help us, feel free to click this Google Form to share it. Thanks so much for pitching in! – Seth
Video transcript:
Hey parents and teachers. I hope you’re having a great day. I have a letter from a mom here at them going to be too and it says I slept you have any information or inside you can share on getting teens to take ownership or buying great great great question because it’s a huge issue lack the motivation procrastination things like that have everything to do with a buying an ownership of my head against the wall as I try countless tools and techniques to make life easier or better for my teenage daughter. The one thing that is missing is buying I’ve come to the conclusion that I can continue to spend endless hours reading research and searching for ideas that will benefit her. But until I ever buy in all for naught this is very frustrating as life doesn’t have to be this challenging for her. I feel you have any information would be appreciated it will I have six ways that I’m going to a 6 ideas. I’m going to give you for how to help increase buying and first I’m going to give you a little bit of background to set you up for those but none of this is easy and it’s not going to be I mean you you guys have an uphill battle when it’s hard. But what I can tell you is I’ve been doing this a long time and change happens. You have to be patient you have to be persistent and you have to be diligent. But with my clients we see change so don’t stop don’t give up. This is real. The brain can change and its habits can change. It’s just not easy. So first I want to Define buying an ownership. So buying an ownership refers to a sense that a person is bought into something that it means something to them ownership is just the same basic concept they take ownership because they have a part in it. They own part of it. So for example, if I have a child and I go and I buy them a bunch of folders in 3-ring binders and notebooks and stopping to come home and I say hey, here’s your notebooks there go you should be grateful. They don’t have any ownership. They didn’t get to choose the colors. They didn’t get to choose the styles. They don’t have any ownership of they didn’t they weren’t involved in the process. They don’t have any ownership in those items. They may or may not appreciate it. But if there’s ownership, they will have more of an appreciation by and of course is very similar by and would be that they have an interest in these things for using the same example, you might say to your child before you go shopping for school stuff. Hey, do you want to feel pretty organized this year? Yeah. Well if they say yeah, you’ve got a little bit of buying. Okay. What what what do you think you need and it might say well, I need some good supplies. And you say okay. Well, where do you want to go for supplies and they say I will I want to go to the Tapas tour you say? Okay. Well what kind of supplies you think would help you be successful and they say I owe this business that’s buying because they’re taking the ownership of it. They have buying now, when you go to the store there more invested problem is is we are asking these kids to do. Things with no ownership and no buying or telling them what classes to take how long they last through their teachers are what books they need what the curriculum is going to be like what the tester like what the papers are like what the projects are like, we’re not giving them a part of the process. Why would they be interested? So many schools fail to do this, right and it’s not rocket science. But schools depend on these things called curriculum which are often very top down there designed by people. They don’t know and places. We don’t know based on Research supposedly. That’s supposedly going to help raise scores because we have this whole system that believes that these scores are so valuable and a lot of things revolve around this any I’m not going to get out on too much of a rant. But the point is is the way that it’s constructed is not constructed in a way to give them ownership and buy him. That’s a pro. So let me explore for specific reasons that your child doesn’t have buying one. They don’t have very good future thinking anyhow, a lot of kids who struggle with executive function and a lot of teens and kids are not good at looking realistically into the future and saying, oh I want to set myself up to be successful. I’m going to need financial stability strong relationship shotti Gotti. They just don’t understand the reality of the consequences of their actions. The brain just hasn’t developed to that date yet. Por la ticket number two on why they don’t have ownership in Buy in is because there’s a lack of reward weather internal or external. They’re not rewarded by it feeling meaningful. Cuz a lot of the great film is not meaningful to them. They’re not rewarded by being engaged same thing because it’s not meaningful not engaging not interesting. It’s not stimulating so I don’t have to buy him because there’s no reward number three. They sometimes I have by him because it not only doesn’t feel good and engaging but it feels bad their Associated their school experiences and their learning and their homework and their tests and all of these things with feeling bad with feeling like I’m not enough I can’t do enough. I never do it, right this always happens why even try and they could be shamed your lazy. You don’t try your best. You just don’t care about school enough. Justin motivated you’re just undisciplined. So these shaming messages are very unmotivated does not increase buying number for because they are legitimately overwhelmed the vast quantity of tasks that we’re asking them to do is absolutely overwhelming. Don’t have a hundred energy points in the day and you only have four places. They can go you spend your energy physically emotionally mentally and socially once you exceed your daily energy points, you are now in overwhelmed. So these kids are often running and overwhelm in fight or flight. So for them to be asked to have extra buy in for something that’s not meaning for engaging is a tall order does the four reasons why they’re not bought in now. Let’s look at six ways that you can increase buying one discuss the future. They don’t have a great future top of disgusted in a really relaxed fun and gauged way with your kid have heart hearts with your kid turn off a technology sit down with them. Tell him you want to have a talk bring out family album talk about the future at them with their hopes and dreams and goals are and really invest in multiple conversations with your child over the next several years. Every month or two have a big sit-down conversation about this stuff and when you’re discussing the future talk about education and what I always talk about with kids is the meaning of Education the Latin word addict Haddaway What education comes from means to launch or to bring forth or to bring forward to or to bring up? And the funny thing is is that we say we bring up our kids we raise our kids and those that’s what education is about bringing up raising bring them up in the world why so that they can launch what does launch mean to me? It means that they can launch a happy and successful future where they can go if their hopes and dreams where they have the skills and knowledge you go for the hopes and dreams very simple, but have that discussion with them what is education for like zoom out with your kid and have these discussions number to to increase buying in ownership is to be honest with them. Sometimes it is boring. Sometimes they are asked to do meaningless stuff when I’m With kids in the kids cuz I hate this I look at it. When I go I get that doesn’t look very interesting to me either but it’s a necessary evil. So how are we going to get through it? So I don’t let them just stop there. But I say I acknowledge it man. I would feel the same way with a lot of the stuff that I see these kids going through. I’m not going to lie to these kids, but you want to really be honest with them and really be like, yeah, I get it that is boring or that does not sing with me unless I understand how you could say, when will you ever use that? Because I honestly don’t know when you will ever use that rather than trying to convince them of the value of it, which usually backfires number 3 next and similarly is to hold space for them. Don’t try to fix anything for them. Don’t try to change the way things are for them. Don’t try to convince them. Don’t try to logic them. Just hold space and listen listen to their experience. Being emotionally safe person that they can come too and that they can express and share their frustrations. Don’t tell them how they should be. Just listen. Ask them. How can I help you? How can I support you rather than telling them what you suggest? Get the buy-in first from the type of support that they want for me number for reward them things don’t feel meaningful to them because it doesn’t feel meaningful. Emotion is so important here. They have to feel good and what I mean by reward them is reward them reward them verbally inauthentically insincerely for the things that you see and appreciate in notice about them. Hey, I noticed you tried really hard on that. Hey, I noticed that you’re getting really resist about that. But you’re being honest with me about it is that you self started on your own today, even though you had a while you self started really focus on what you noticed use the 3-2-1 rule. I talk a lot with parents about the 3 2 1 rule 3 positive to everyone for Steve negative. Tell them three positive things. Tell them lots and lots of positive things reward them. So that wouldn’t so that when they leave you they leave on a high note rewarding them verbally will help increase engagement, you know how to make it more meaningful to them not teachers come really reward them by making things more interesting and engaging when you have a great teacher who’s able to make the curriculum meaning Are the kids that automatically is rewarding to them something being meaningful is rewarding when a teacher is really engaging when a teacher is a great Storyteller when it’s when a teacher engages in their craft as a master and they’re able to inspire a group of children that’s rewarding in and of itself. So number for is that they have to have some sort of a reward in order for them to be bought or to take ownership number five is to reduce overwhelm member. I said social emotional cognitive and physical energy. How can you reduce the overwhelm in all four of those domains? Some things will give us more energy and something’s will suck energy for us. So for example, some social experiences enliven us, but summer draining some people are really draining to us, but look at all the different areas and see how you can reduce the other one. You might get an executive function coaching dive into my blog look at the executive function stuff make life easier for them by giving them systems in tools so that they’re less overwhelmed. With having to manage the school work in last in this is similar to the reward. It’s basically we stayed in the reward run just make them feel good. Use the 3 2 1 rule leave them on a high note have them feeling good. I know that the baby either way parents and teachers don’t stop patiently persistently and diligently continue to help with these things and you will see more buying it more engagement. This is a Long messy process. Patiently persistently and diligently continue Goodluck. Meanwhile. If you like this video, please share with somebody right now that helps me and helps my blog grow and it also helps the person you and please hit subscribe in YouTube. You can turn on notifications if you want and it will tell you every time I put out a new video. Have a great day.
Here’s a guest post by Adrianne Meldrum of Math for Middles! Adrianne is an amazing online math tutor, mom and friend. I’ve always been impressed by her talent, knowledge and the heart she puts into her work. Enjoy! (ps-check out her site here. She has plenty of free resources to help AND a phenomenal podcast.)When your adolescent was in elementary school, you had a general feeling that math was going well. No big issues that seemed to cause alarm in the teacher.
Fast forward to now and math seems to be this constant struggle for many teens. Let’s explore the six most common math issues that plague teen students.
1 – Spotty Recall of Math Facts
As a math tutor, I find myself sitting in silence for several minutes as I wait for my students to compute math facts in their head or on paper.
Math facts are the building blocks to speaking the language of math. Without being able to recall math facts or have a strategy to figure it out, your brain energy is spent trying to grab that information or punch the numbers in the calculator when really it should be focused on learning this new math information coming in.
This doesn’t mean that we start running our children through flashcards to increase their recall.
The real problem?The student doesn’t have an adequate number sense.
The goal is to create a brain that can be flexible in using numbers. If a student can’t remember what 7 x 8 is, do they understand that they can go to another set of numbers such as 8 x 6 and then add 8 more?
Memorization and strategies are essential to recalling math facts.
Jo Boaler shares, “Brain researchers have studied students learning math facts in two ways – through strategies or memorization. They found that the two approaches (strategies or memorization) involve two distinct pathways in the brain and that both pathways are perfectly good for lifelong use.
They concluded that automaticity should be reached through understanding of numerical relations, achieved through thinking about number strategies.
The core of mathematics is reasoning – thinking through why methods make sense and talking about reasons for the use of different methods.” (Boaler, 2013)
What you can do about it NOW:
Apply the ideas in this article: 15 Fun Ways to Master Math Facts in the Middle School Years
2 – Fraction Panic
Over the years, I’ve noticed that many of my students feel confident and can move through their homework at a decent pace until they see…
A Fraction.
Many students get tripped up because they have been taught gimmicky tricks or ways to remember how to manipulate fractions.
“Ours is not to reason why, just flip and multiply.”These tricks hurt students in the long run as they do not truly understand how fractions work. Fractions are everywhere in math but often in disguise.
Students don’t understand that fractions are part of these concepts too:
Decimals
Percents
Ratios
Proportions
Polynomial Division
And that’s because fractions are just division.What you can do about it NOW:
Read and learn the 3 Essential rules for Fractions.
3 – Symbol Overwhelm
Equations with variables, parentheses, brackets and such can look overwhelming when we don’t understand their use and in what order we should tackle a problem.
These symbols are tools and allow us to work efficiently.A variable is a placeholder for an unknown quantity, in algebra we’re often left searching for the value of x.
Parentheses and brackets are grouping tools. They tell us: “think of this set of numbers and/or variables as one quantity or group” It should trigger in the student that I need to pay attention to what is inside of these brackets.
Exponents are a shorter (more efficient) way to show repeated multiplication.
When we have all of these combined together, it can cause overwhelm. Having a consistent place to refer to can help when it gets hard. Use the link below to help.
What you can do about it NOW:
Review How to Use These Symbols and in What Order with Math Antics
4 – Attention to Detail
Many students omit small items that lead to points lost which bring decent math test grades down.
Details often overlooked are:
Identifying units in their answer
Not answering all of the questions in the word problem
Many students just don’t know where, to begin with math notes, nor do they see the benefit. I’m sure you are noticing a trend in the math classroom towards no textbooks. As a parent that grew up using textbooks, this is tremendously frustrating. Add to that the common core way of doing math and you’ve got a real mess on your hands.
Taking math notes the right way will help the information being shared during class become more brain sticky. When you listen to new information, apply your own processing to it, and then write it down–you’re creating connections inside of the brain. Our brains are wired to try to make sense of things. Taking the time to write and draw examples makes learning more sticky.
The other important concept that needs attention around notes is to actually open them up and apply them to homework. Anytime I tutor and a student asks me a question, I’ll say to them, “What do your notes say?”
If there are no notes to even refer to, we’ll do the research together and I have them write it down.
When your child plops down in their chair to tackle homework, have them pull out their notes. This becomes their pseudo textbook for the class.
What you can do about it NOW:Learn how to take brain-sticky notes and teach your child.
6 – Resistance to Math in General
Most likely you’ve got a child that pushes back and avoids math like I avoid smelly Brussel sprouts!
Sadly, many students have turned off from math altogether because they’ve believed this misconception:
Strong math students are fast math students.
WRONG!!!
Jo Boaler, a world-renowned math professor tells stories of very gifted and VERY slow mathematicians.
Your speed has nothing to do with how awesome you are at math.
That’s one of the things many of my student’s like about me:
I don’t do complicated math in my head (I have to write it down)
I make mistakes and own up to them
I use math notes too
We’re all human and this misconception that there is only one way to do math which is fast and without error is just silly. We make mistakes.
What can you do about resistance NOW?Warm-ups
When I’m switching from one type of task like writing to math, it takes awhile to change gears and get going. This makes sense as different parts of the brain are used for those different tasks.
Math warm-up activities allow the mind to relax and lower the stress of working on math. It also creates a safe environment for practice and focuses the mind. Messing up during a game isn’t nearly as frustrating as it is with a homework problem. The games should be easy and mostly review.
Spending time warming up the brain for 5 minutes doing low-stakes math like Sudoku, Pyramid Solitaire (a personal favorite), or Spiral. There are tons of ideas in a general search on Google.Reframe Teacher Feedback
Often student’s feel defeated when they get a test back and filled with red marks. They feel like they can’t change the past and in turn, decide that they are NOT good at math.
When your adolescent comes home with a test that has marks all over it, this is the time to reframe the test.
A test is just feedback. It is not an indicator of your potential as a person.
When students first start working with me, they often will bring a graded test in distress and pronounce, “I just totally don’t get ANY of this”. Usually, this is the furthest from the truth. When I look at the test, I see small items being missed (see number 4 above).
When I spend time helping students identify where they went wrong, they see that in all actuality they did have it down but a calculation went wrong or they left some details out.
Seek Help from a Neutral Party
Emotions can run high when you feel like you’re repeatedly failing math. Not only does resistance set in because the brain wants to protect you from this uncomfortable pain, but it can be difficult to tackle math when your relationship is strained with parents.
Plus there may be an underlying learning issue from attention problems to dyscalculia (math dyslexia). Getting assistance from a trained professional always helps.
Try implementing a few of the ideas in this article and you’ll be well on your way to finding relief from these common math plagues.
Adrianne Meldrum has been tutoring math to middle and high school students since 2006. She’s trained in multisensory math and knows how to help students with learning differences make the leap from math-frustrated to math-confident. Watch her free homework drama class.
This is the first time I have had a guest post. I am extremely picky about things like that, but I’ve wanted Jen to do a post for me for a long time because she is really good at her work! So, I invited Boulder somatic psychotherapist, Jennifer Delaney, MA, NCC to write a guest post specifically about anxiety, because over the years I have seen that it is a growing problem for our youth. I’ve witnessed more and more kids go to residential treatment centers for anxiety and other emotional problems, whereas those were once just for chemical dependency issues. I work with more and more clients who struggle with debilitating anxiety. For example, one student hasn’t been to school in over a month, because his anxiety is so bad that he can’t get himself out of the house, despite his best intentions. Often parents and teachers do not understand it and that can make things worse, despite trying to help.
Jen is colleague and one of the most talented therapists I’ve ever met. I have sent numerous families to get help from her. Jen teaches body-centered tools to support Brainspotting and other counseling modalities. She also assists adults and teens struggling with anxiety and transitions such as divorce or beginning college. You can read Jen’s awesome blog here (sign up, it’s fantastic)or check out her Course: Get Calm! Neuroscientific Tips and Tools to Relieve Anxiety
The Struggle with Anxiety and How to Support Your Kids
In the Huff Post, Lindsay Holmes states, “Anxiety disorders affect approximately 40 million American adults per year, which is about 18% of the country’s population. They are also one of the most prevalent pediatric psychiatric conditions.”
This is why it’s imperative to identify anxiety early, and to offer kids some skills and understanding about what they are up against, so that they can feel supported to thrive.
The Set Up
It was easier for parents in days of yore, because the emotional well-being of a child wasn’t a top priority. Buck up! Get a grip!I’ll give you something to cry about! were common responses. As psychological awareness increased, life got more complicated. Most parents and caregivers seek to offer kids healthy boundaries and challenge them, while also honoring their emotions and limitations, including anxiety. I have read callous articles bemoaning pandering to kids’ feelings that do not take into consideration the additional pressures kids are under, as well as more subtle influences, such as inherited ancestral trauma.
In the Time Magazine article, “Anxiety, Depression and the Modern Adolescent,” Susanna Schrobsdorff states, “Sometimes called spoiled, coddled or helicoptered… a closer look paints a far more heartbreaking portrait of why young people are suffering. Anxiety and depression in high school kids have been on the rise since 2012 after several years of stability. It’s a phenomenon that cuts across all demographics–suburban, urban and rural; those who are college bound and those who aren’t. Family financial stress can exacerbate these issues, and studies show that girls are more at risk than boys.”
Adverse Childhood Experiences
Sometimes there are more obvious factors called Adverse Childhood Experiences or ACES. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention states, “Childhood experiences, both positive and negative, have a tremendous impact on future violence victimization and perpetration, and lifelong health and opportunity. As such, early experiences are an important public health issue.” Parents, as well as high school counselors and educators, could offer kids an ACES assessment to have a better understanding of their background.
Awareness = Evolution
I’ve also read articles bemoaning the idea that every kid is getting a trophy, rather than allowing children to experience and navigate loss, and I would agree that protecting children from all inevitable emotional pain isn’t helpful. But human evolution is a messy process. The pendulum will swing, and we will find a happy medium. If you think about it, this long of a stretch of affluence and peace is unprecedented. If we don’t have an external battle throwing humans into survival mode, then we have the opportunity to explore the internal terrain of emotions. This new frontier can be equally terrifying, and often people create internal threats because this newfound peace feels foreign. We recreate what we know.
I Can Relate
Families can be relatively well adjusted and happy, providing a child with every kind of support, and a child might still struggle with anxiety. As a matter of fact, that can contribute to shame if a child is thinking, “I have nothing to be scared about.”
I have a child who struggles with anxiety, and it was particularly difficult for her in high school when academic pressures mounted at a time when she was dealing with social issues. Self-acceptance isn’t exactly on the top of the list at that age. Before they can accept who they are, they need to understand themselves and their limitations, and realize that it’s okay to be themselves. That comes with maturity. Academic and social pressures were hard enough for my daughter to navigate, but throw in a bit of family discord, a personal trauma as well as ancestral trauma (a grandmother who almost died several times in WWII) and a political world full of contention, and it just got to be too overwhelming.
Happily, by supporting her and trusting her process, my daughter is in a successful two-year relationship and is a senior at UCSD. She still struggles with anxiety, but she has learned how to navigate it in her own way and on her own time. Pushing her outside of her “window of tolerance” or shaming her would have exacerbated the problem and led to further disorders.
Window of Tolerance
If you don’t read another word of this article, it is important for children, parents and educators alike to at least watch this 6-minute video about the Window of Tolerance. Each child has different triggers and varying windows sizes. When pushed outside of that window, the cortical brain goes offline and the limbic and reptilian parts of the brain take control. Effective therapies can widen kids’ windows of tolerance and help them to tolerate more pressure.
What is Anxiety?
Some anxiety and fear is usual and customary. After all, if we didn’t have some fear we wouldn’t leap out of the way of an oncoming car that we didn’t hear coming. Some fear protects us. However, when vigilance becomes ongoing hypervigilance, it takes a toll on the body, mind and spirit.
Diagnosis
I am focusing here on what is diagnosed as Generalized Anxiety Disorder (GAD), not Social Anxiety or Panic Disorder, although some people may suffer from a mix of disorders, not just exclusive to anxiety.
I could write a whole post about the advantages and disadvantages of diagnosis, but in a nutshell: The downside is that people may get pigeonholed or labeled based on the diagnosis or a professional potentially might misdiagnose. (Complex Trauma is often misdiagnosed as depression and anxiety.)
Also, it’s important to explain to kids that they are not their disorder. They don’t need to identify as that. It is just a small piece that offers the opportunity to get the right kind of support and helps them to feel less alone. There is nothing wrong with their essential being; they are just dealing with some physiological (not psychological) components that complicate their good intentions and cognitive function.
The Truth about Teens with Anxiety
Most of them are conscientious and have a desire to do well and to overcome their disorder. The internalized shame around the behavioral effects of their anxiety makes the anxiety even worse so to imply that they are weak or trying to get attention exacerbates the issue.
It’s important when talking with teens to tell them that there is nothing wrong with them psychologically. Anxiety is physiological. For some reason, when triggered, their body sends them into survival mode (fight, flight or freeze), which is outside of conscious control. It feels “life or death” to the body and it’s not an option. Trauma and anxiety triggers are stored outside of the language centers, in the deep brain. When people develop a better understanding about what’s going on in their brain, they can have more compassion for their disorder. Just keep this in mind: Shame makes it worse and sends a person back into the anxiety loop, whereas compassion provides space for the brain to heal.
Symptoms of Anxiety
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, “People with generalized anxiety disorder display excessive anxiety or worry for months and face several anxiety-related symptoms.”
Here is a list of the symptoms associated with GAD:
Restlessness or feeling wound-up or on edge
Being easily fatigued
Difficulty concentrating or having their minds go blank
Irritability
Muscle tension
Difficulty controlling the worry
Sleep problems (difficulty falling or staying asleep or restless, unsatisfying sleep)
Many kids suffer in silence, so it’s helpful to consider these symptoms, and if they are exhibiting several of them, to consider GAD as a potential issue.
Common Misconceptions
In perusing the web for myths, I came across many sources.
Here are some of the myths and faulty beliefs listed as blocks to meaningful and lasting recovery:
Once you have it, you’ll always have it; there is nothing that can be done.
There are quick-fix remedies and miracle cures for overcoming anxiety.
If you eat right, exercise, avoid caffeine, and live a healthy lifestyle, your anxiety will go away.
Deep relaxation alone can eliminate anxiety disorder.
People with anxiety are weak; struggling with anxiety isn’t a big deal.
The condition is not that common.
Issues with anxiety stem from a poor childhood.
People suffering from anxiety should just avoid whatever is causing their fear.
The disorder will resolve on its own.
Unwinding with a drink can soothe an anxious person.
Anxiety disorder is caused by a chemical imbalance in the brain.
Anxiety disorder is caused by a genetic predisposition.
Anxiety is only born from a certain fear or trauma.
There’s nothing you can say to help an anxious person relax.
There are more myths, but this gives you a general idea.
Here’s what young adults with anxiety had to say
(as reported by BuzzFeed staff writer, Anna Kopsky):
Anxiety’s a real condition — not just a buzzword.
There doesn’t always have to be a tangible reason behind feeling anxious.
Sometimes, it hits out of absolutely nowhere.
Having it isn’t a quirk. If someone tells you they are anxious, take them seriously!
Anxiousness isn’t just “a phase.”
Telling us to calm down actually makes things worse.
Suggesting that we meditate isn’t very helpful advice.
Medication isn’t an instant fix. If it were, though, that’d be incredible, right?
No, we DO NOT enjoy being anxious.
We are not pretending to have an illness to get attention.
We’re not trying to come off as rude, angry, or lazy.
Just because we get anxious about seemingly irrational things, doesn’t mean we aren’t logical people.
Living with anxiety can get seriously exhausting.
Just because we don’t act like we’re on edge, doesn’t mean we’re not.
If you have a friend who’s anxious, the best way to help is to be kind, or just listen.
And, most importantly, having anxiety DOES NOT make someone weak.
Self-Control vs. Self-Regulation
In Dr. Stuart Shanker and Teresa Barker’s book, SELF-REG: How to Help Your Child (and you) Break the Stress Cycle and Successful Engage with Life, he states, “Self-control is about inhibiting impulses; self-regulation is about identifying the causes and reducing the intensity of impulses and, when necessary [and possible], having the energy to resist. He offers a five-step method to 1. Recognize when the child is overstressed, 2. Identify and then 3. Reduce the stressors 4. Help, or empower, the child to know how to help herself and 5. Help her to develop self-regulation strategies.
While GAD is more overwhelming than just being “stressed,” learning self-regulation can help. If practiced when an individual is calm, it is more likely to help when they are triggered because in spite of the cognitive parts of the brain shutting down, it will have become second nature or a habit to practice self-regulation.
What do you do when the shit hits the fan?
Ms. Holmes goes on to say: “If you’re looking to put someone you know with anxiety at ease, the best thing to do is to ask questions. Inquire from the person, ‘How can I be helpful?’ ‘What can I do or say that’s going to help you in this moment?’ Take your direction from the person themselves instead of going on the assumption of what they may need from you.”
While breath work can be a helpful preventative measure, telling someone who is seriously anxious to take a deep breath will make the situation worse. Remember their bodies are telling them they are in a life or death situation even if they “know” they aren’t, so slowing the breath down feels counterintuitive and, often, will actually send someone into a panic attack.
Instead, try a vagal maneuver.
The Vagus Nerve
Stimulating the vagus nerve brings on board the parasympathetic nervous system and overrides the physiological fight, flight or freeze reaction. The quickest and simplest one when someone is in a heightened or hypervigilant state is to hold an ice cube or put a cold rag on the face. You can also dunk your hands in ice water. A teen could keep an ice pack in a lunch bag and use as needed. I provide more exercises and vagal maneuvers below.
When the vagus nerve adapts, and is easily stimulated, this is referred to as “vagal tone.”
What kind of support to seek
A combination of good self-help information and working with an experienced anxiety disorder therapist, coach, or counselor is the most effective way to address anxiety and its many symptoms. Find a counselor who practices a somatic or body-centered modality because the roots of anxiety are stored outside of language centers, in the deep brain. That being said, ideally the counselor will be familiar with both a Body-Centered Technique, such as Brainspotting, as well as Cognitive Behavior Therapy (CBT) skills. CBT is an excellent complement, because it helps to set some goals that help to increase the window of tolerance and change habits. However, CBT alone falls short long term, because it does not tap and potentially resolve the source.
Mindfulness is important to learn, and most body-centered therapists model forms of it in their therapies. Dr. David Grand, creator of Brainspotting, for example, refers to his modality as “focused mindfulness.” I provide some mindfulness exercises below.
What to do proactively to help prevent/minimize anxiety
Listening to bilateral music while wearing headphones (which are required for the bilateral effect) can decrease anxiety.
Bilateral Music:
Search on YouTube for “bilateral music – Dr. David Grand”
Here is a sample.
Websites
Biolateral.com or Reflections or any album by “Bodhi Tree Bilateral” at CDBaby.com
Vagal Maneuvers and Mindfulness Exercises to practice
Vagal Maneuvers
Diving Reflex: Considered a first rate vagus nerve stimulation technique, splashing cold water on your face from your lips to your scalp line stimulates the diving reflex. You can also achieve the nervous system cooling effects by placing ice cubes in a zip-lock and holding the ice against your face and a brief hold of your breath. The diving reflex slows your heart rate, increases blood flow to your brain, reduces anger and relaxes your body. An additional technique that stimulates the diving reflex is to submerge your tongue in liquid. Drink and hold lukewarm water in your mouth sensing the water with your tongue. Also, from Dialectical Behavior Therapy, dunking one or both hands in ice can serve to bring the body back to present time and, thus, the prefrontal cortex, or thinking brain, back online.
Convergence: Hold up a pen or your index finger. Make sure your arm is comfortable with the position. Now, move your focus from the tip of the pen (or finger) to point beyond it on the wall or floor. Spend 3-8 seconds at each spot. “Convergence Brainspotting activates the ocular cardiac reflex (OCR) which leads to rapid, deep processing.” (from Brainspotting by Dr. David Grand)
Humming: The vagus nerve passes through by the vocal cords and the inner ear and the vibrations of humming is a free and easy way to influence your nervous system states. Simply pick your favorite tune and you’re ready to go. Or if yoga fits your lifestyle you can “OM” your way to wellbeing. Notice and enjoy the sensations in your chest, throat, and head.
Breath Work:
The breath is one of the fastest ways to influence our nervous system states. The aim is to move the belly and diaphragm with the breath and to slow down your breathing. Vagus nerve stimulation occurs when the breath is slowed from our typical 10-14 breaths per minute to 5-7 breaths per minute. You can achieve this by counting the inhalation to 5, hold briefly, and exhale to a count of 10. You can further stimulate the vagus nerve by creating a slight constriction at the back of the throat and creating an “hhh”. Breathe like you are trying to fog a mirror to create the feeling in the throat but inhale and exhale out of the nose sound (in yoga this is called Ujjayi pranayama).
(Andrew Weil) If you are stressed (and not seriously anxious), sit comfortably and take a deep, slow breath in through the nose and into the diaphragm for 4 seconds. Hold for 6 seconds and breathe out slowly through the mouth 8 seconds (place tip of tongue on the ridge on the upper palate of the mouth while exhaling). Repeat 10 times. If you are hyperventilating, cup your hands over your mouth (or use a small paper bag) and breathe slowly. Keep breathing as you would normally to regain the carbon dioxide levels in your system.
Inhale and pause, and then exhale and pause. Notice if one is longer or shorter and try to make them equal length. You can also experiment with making small movements (like rolling the wrists) on inhale and then be still on the exhale.
Valsalva Maneuver: This complicated name refers to a process of attempting to exhale against a closed airway. You can do this by keeping your mouth closed and pinching your nose while trying to breathe out. This increases the pressure inside of your chest cavity increasing vagal tone. Also, simultaneously bear down like you’re taking a bowel movement.
Mindfulness Exercises
Take Your Pulse: Place your left hand underneath your right shoulder. Cross your right hand over your left wrist and feel for your pulse with your index, middle and ring finger. Feel under each finger. In Jin Shin, practitioners read six different pulses in each wrist. Here you will be feeling for three. Notice if the pulses under each finger feel different or the same. They may be pebbly, feathery, pounding or “just right.” Notice if your skin feels warm and soft. Breathe into the diaphragm and continue for 1-5 minutes.
Self Soothe: From the work of Peter Levine creator of Somatic Experiencing, this practice calms the nervous system and brings a person back into the body, present time. Close your eyes during this exercise once you are familiar with it. Choose a hand to place on your heart – try both hands and pick the hand that creates the greatest sense of calm. Press gently against your chest. Notice the place where your hand meets the fabric of your shirt. Is it soft or rough? Do you feel warmth? Now place the opposite hand on your forehead with a gentle pressure. Notice the place where your hand meets the skin of your forehead. Is it warm? Cold? Tingling? Slow your breath, allowing it to be deeper into the diaphragm and belly. Leaving your hand on your heart, now take the hand that was on your forehead and place it on your stomach. Again, observe the feeling underneath your hand. Can you feel your belly rising and falling with your breath? Can you feel your heart beating underneath the other hand? Do this for 1-10 minutes.
Short version: Just place your hand on your heart and notice your breath without changing it. This can be done anywhere, any time with immediate results.
Gravity Exploration: Sit comfortably in a chair. Feel the weight of your feet on the floor, as though they are sandbags. Imagine that you are an ice cube melting as you release as much tension as possible. Notice your breath. Now feel the effects of gravity. Notice how much effort it takes to hold your head upright. Gently tip your head forward and feel its weight. Bring it back up in line with the body. Open your mouth and notice how much effort it requires to keep it closed. Feel gravity pulling at you and relax even more deeply – notice where you were still holding on. Try to stay out of judgment in this exercise the primary objective is to explore and observe. Pick up a hand and allow it to slowly move back to your lap, allowing it to drop the last 6 inches. Just play with the effects of gravity and notice how relaxed you feel after 10 minutes of exploration.
Grounding: Dr. Peter Levine’s version is to stand barefoot, legs wide and feet firmly planted; place hands on belly and sense your center of gravity; sway gently feeling the connection between your feet and the ground. You can even take off your shoes to feel connection to the earth or imagine roots growing down out of the feet. (Set an alarm to go off 2-3 times a day to remember you are in a body.)
Outside-In: (Dr. Levine) Choose something in the room that is appealing to look at. Name two qualities/aspects that you like. Briefly describe the qualities. What is the feeling sense these qualities give you? Now imagine these feelings have a texture or color that could move towards and into you. For instance, if the warm light of a lamp comforts you, imagine the warm light moving into you like a golden stream. The act of focusing on something outside of you helps you to become fully present, removed from the past incident that continues to trigger you – whether the initiating incident is conscious or not.
Constructive Rest: This position calms the psoas muscle, one of the largest muscles in the body that joins the upper body to the lower body. It holds deep-seated fear and trauma, which can cause it to shorten over time and tense regularly. Constructive rest allows this muscle to relax and lengthen.
Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT): There are many YouTubes about EFT otherwise known as “Tapping.” One taps on specific meridian points while repeating the phrase: “Even though I feel ______, I completely love and accept myself. I recommend to clients to choose the favorite spot (that creates the most inner peace) to tap when feeling anxious.
Great Resources
Badenoch, B. (2008). Being a Brain-wise Therapist: A Practical Guide to Interpersonal Neurobiology, New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company
Baum, B. (1997). The Healing Dimensions: Resolving Trauma in BodyMind and Spirit.Tucson, AZ: West Press
Cozolino, L. (2015) Why Therapy Works. NY: W. W. Norton & Company
Grand, D. (n.d.) What is Brainspotting? Retrieved June 13, 2013 from http://www.brainspotting.pro/page/what-brainspotting
Levine, P. (2005). Healing Trauma, Boulder, CO: Sounds True, Inc.
Levine, P. (1997). Waking the Tiger: Healing Trauma, Berkeley, California: North Atlantic Books
Marie, D. (2016). Finding Calm In a Moment:108 Practices in Movement, Mindfulness and Meditation for All Ages
Maté, G. (2011). When the Body Says No: The Cost of Hidden Stress, Vintage Canada
McLaren, K. (2010). Language of Emotions, Sounds True
Mellin, L. (2010). Wired for Joy, Hay House
Ogden, P. (2006). Trauma and the Body: A Sensorimotor Approach to Psychotherapy, New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Co.
Porges, S. (2012). The Polyvagal Theory: Neurophysiological Foundations of Emotions, Attachment, Communication, and Self-regulation, NY, NY: W. W. Norton & Co.
Ralston, P. & Ralston, L. (2006) Zen Body-Being: An Enlightened Approach to Physical Skill, Grace and Power. Berkeley, CA: North Atlantic Books
Scaer, R. (2005). The Trauma Spectrum: Hidden Wounds and Human Resiliency, New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
Schwartz, A. & Knipe, J. (2017). The Complex PTSD Workbook: A Mind-Body Approach to Regaining Emotional Control and Becoming Whole, Althea Press
Shanker, S. & Barker, T. (2016). SELF-REG: How to Help Your Child (and you) Break the Stress Cycle and Successful Engage with Life, NY, NY: Penguin Books
Siegel, D. (2015) Brainstorm, New York: Tarcher
Strozzi-Heckler, R. (2014). The Art of Somatic Coaching, Berkley: North Atlantic Books
Van der Kolk, B. (2014). The Body Keeps the Score: Brain, Mind and Body in the Healing of Trauma, New York: Viking
Hey Seth, I’ve been thinking about next semester. My son did ok ( I.e. no D’s/F’s). But there were several classes that he should have had better grades in (actually most of them!). These are classes where he started off strong. His M.O. typically is as you describe, although he seems to be able to “Hail Mary” it at the end (stressful for both of us!).
Out tutor does a great job working with him; the problem is the follow-through. (finishing, remembering to finish, handing in everything) of course he rejects the planner and so often forgets key elements of assignments). He usually volunteers what he needs to do, then doesn’t do it.
He is already fluent in your systems and has rejected some / made some his own. He’s sort of in need of the next step I.e. using the tools you’ve provided to make himself responsible as well as being accountable to someone he trusts like you.
I was wondering if you had thoughts on offering something for kids like him who are beyond the basics but still need a push to succeed, to change their mindset (a term loathed by my son btw!).
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Video transcript:
Hi everybody, I hope you’re doing great. I have a really great email I’m going to go over for you. The gist of what I’m going to get to on this email is that a mom is asking, “how do I help my child get to the next step?” the child sort of has a decent foundation on what he’s supposed to do, but how do we get him to do it? So here’s how the email goes. And what I’m going to do, by the way, is I’m going to give you five ways to help in a situation like this. So here’s how it goes: “Hey Seth, I’ve been thinking about next semester (which happens to be the upcoming spring semester) my child did okay, meaning that there are no D’s or F’s but there were several classes that he should have had better grades. Actually, most of them!These are classes where he started off strong. His M.O. typically is as you describe, although he seems to be able to ‘Hail Mary’ it at the end, which is stressful for both of us!”So a lot of times this child goes through the DIP, their grades fall apart and then they’re swimming upstream for the rest of the semester. And in this case, he ‘Hail Mary’s it,’ meaning the last month of school when there’s a ton of stress and he’s trying to do all these projects and papers and everything, and he’s able to pull it off okay. Meanwhile, as you get further in school and into high school and such, it gets harder and harder to successfully ‘Hail Mary it.’Anyhow, “Our tutor does a great job of working with our child. The problem though is the follow-through. Finishing. Remembering to finish. Handing in everything. Of course, he rejects the planner and so often forgets key elements of assignments. He usually volunteers what he needs to do and then doesn’t do it. He’s already fluent in your systems and he has rejected some.” I’m totally okay with this, she says he’s made some of his own which is really good. He doesn’t have to do everything the way I teach but getting some system in place is key. And then refining it for that person, that’s called Frankenstudy by the way if you haven’t been following For a while. “He’s sort of in need of a next step. I.e., using the tools you provided to make himself more responsible as well as being accountable to someone he trusts, like you. I was wondering if you had thoughts on offering something for kids like this who are beyond the basics, but still need to push to change their ‘mindset,’ which is a term loathed by my child by the way.”Mindset is a huge, huge part of this. And what I’m going to talk to you about right now in terms of how to help with this has a lot to do with mindset. So first of all, I want you to understand, parents, that if your child is in this type of situation and you need them to get the next level, they have the foundation, they’re just not doing it enough to get the results that they need It’s not one thing. There is no one answer. What you have to do parents is you the child has to do several small things to make a change. It’s kind of like working out. If you want to get healthy and you start going to the gym and all you do is bicep curls and you don’t do any aerobic activity. You don’t work out your legs, you don’t work out your back, all you do is bicep curls. That’s not going to achieve your goals. So when you’re working with kids like this, you have to take many different approaches and apply lots of little things that are going to make the change.So what I want to talk about in terms of mindset, and I’m going to tell you ways to apply this mindset, is what I called the 5% rule. I also talk a lot about micro successes. Basically, the 5% rule is this. I tell students all the time that the reality is that in order for them to do significantly better it often only takes a little bit more effort than they’re already putting in. If they can just put in 5% more effort they often will get way better results. So let’s say your child is getting a bunch of D’s and they put in 5% more effort. Chances are they can bring themselves up to B’s relatively easily. They’re not actually doing 5%, it’s more a mindset. And that mindset is to say, “Hey, I can do 5% more. I can do one more homework problem. When I hit a wall, I can write one more sentence when I know I’m the type of writer who my teacher always says, there’s not enough detail. I can do one more sentence. I can do one more word. I can spend five more minutes studying. I can study one more day this week on this test.” So it’s really a mindset because it’s how do we get the student to take more action? And the reason they don’t is because it’s overwhelming the reason it’s overwhelming is because it’s abstract and they think it’s this big *stretches hands wide* and if we can make them feel like it’s this big *shrinks hands* like it’s manageable, then they’ll do more than 5%. But if we can just make it feel like 5% and that kind of mindset. I’m not trying to motivate them. I’m trying to get them to do what they don’t want to do and I’m trying to say, “Look can you just do one more problem? Can you just do this for five more minutes? Can you do it for one more minute? Can you write one more sentence on this paragraph? Can you do just that much more?” And when that overwhelm is not there, that helps a lot.Now I’m going to give you five things that are going to help sort of with implementing this 5% philosophy.(1) Accountability: One way to get 5% more to get a little bit more is accountability and meaning having your child implement systems that are going to help them be more accountable. So for example, I will often now as a coach, you may or may not work as a parent because kids are not as receptive. But as a coach, I will often email or text or call my students and say, “Hey did you this? Did you do that?” Or I’ll say, “What reminders do you want from me this week and I’ll text you that reminder?” So that little bit of accountability can go a long way if it helps them get one more thing in that they get credit on that can be a difference between a C and a B for example, etc. (2) Office Hours: Another thing that has to of the 5% rule is office hours, or going to see their teacher. I really pushed my students to advocate for themselves and see their teachers. If they go into office hours and see their teacher at the beginning of the semester or a couple of times during the semester and say, “Hey, what’s up, just wanted to check in with you. How are you doing? Hey, do you have any success tips for me?” So I will often recommend that is students go in to see their teacher and ask for a success tip. What can I do to be more successful in your class? That shows interest in the class and the teacher will give them a great tip. And the teacher knows that they’re interested and the teacher will naturally help encourage them throughout the rest of the semester. “Hey, thanks for coming in. Hey don’t forget to do this, don’t forget to do that.” So that goes a long way, and it’s a tiny little 5% thing that goes a long way.(3) Study Group: Next thing is study groups. Middle schoolers don’t often do this, but it’s great to get them started in middle school. But high schoolers and especially college student starting study groups where you have one or two or three friends and you meet on certain days or for certain projects or certain tests or whatever, and they all studied together. It’s fun. It’s more interesting and makes studying more exciting. You learn so much that way, by studying with other people. And it builds in more accountability because they have to be there if they started a study group and that definitely gives them that 5% more studying than they would have otherwise done. (4) Advocacy Emails: Another one is advocacy emails, which is similar to office hours, but I have my student say, “Hey, what’s up? I want to do great in your class this semester. What ideas do you have for me? Can you give me some feedback on what I could do differently?” or something like that. So that’s a very easy thing a short little email to teachers to say, “Hey, I’m interested in doing well. What do you got for me?”(5) Routines: And then the last thing is routine. A lot of times these kids are not very routine kids. So let’s say that their study time now is from 7 to 8:30 or something. It doesn’t really matter what it is, but putting in place study routines so that there’s no ambiguity around it. No saying, “I’ll study when I feel like it tonight,” taking that choice away. Now, they don’t have to study at exactly the same time every night but having a printed and posted routine that takes the thinking out of it so that they know this is my study time. It makes it a lot easier than having to decide when do ‘I feel like,’ it because they’re often not going to feel like it until there’s a lot of pressure or arguments or what have you.So I want to make it really clear that this is not about motivation. I’m not trying to motivate students. I’m trying to make them feel emotionally safe enough to take one next micro-step, that 5%, that 1% rule, whatever you want to call it. I’m trying to make them emotionally feel safe. I want to get that real clear. I want them to emotionally feel not overwhelmed and safe to take a small micro-action that is going to move them forward. And oftentimes, once they do get started, they’ll get a little bit of momentum and they’ll do way more than they did before. It may not be perfect, may but not be completed, may not be the highest quality, but it’s growth and that is what is going to get your child to change. Growth growth growth growth growth. Not perfection, but how do we get them to take a little more action all the time. That’s what works. Anyhow, I hope this helps you and I hope you have a fantastic new year. Take care.
Adrianne Meldrum, from the Math For Middles website and On Middle Ground podcast, recently had me on her show to talk about self-advocacy.
A bit about Adrianne: Adrianne is a fantastic online math tutor who specializes in helping middle school students. I’ve known her for a while and love what she does! She blogs, produces a fantastic podcast about raising teens, and even creates phenomenal videos to help kids with math.
You can sign up for her free updates and free class, Cut Homework Drama, here.
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Here’s a video for Middle School, High School and College students who have exams coming up.
It’s 5 minutes long and I break down my favorite study strategy – and you might be surprised by how “easy” it is.
Good luck with finals! — Seth
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Video transcript:
up Hey everybody. What’s up? This is Seth with Seth perler.com in this video is for middle school high school and college students Zone executive function coach out of Santa Monica, California. We’ve been having fires here in California last couple days, please send out Good Vibes to all these people because they needed a lot of people are really struggling with the effects of this fortunately where I’m at. We’re just dealing with smoke which is definitely affecting my voice. So, excuse me with that any I’m glad you’re here want to talk to you today about my number one study. Now, this is a study to buy give more or less to college students by default. But I also tell middle school and high school students to study tip a lot but it is the pretty much the best way to study. So what research shows is that the best way to learn something the number one, but will let me tell you the worst way to learn something the worst way to learn something is a lecture. And unfortunately, that’s what schools usually do. But the best way to learn something the number one best way to learn something is to teach it. So when I’m working with students, I’m teaching them how to study for finals. Cuz right now it’s December 7th. It’s time for final exams this year. They’re coming up and people tend to do one of the worst study methods ever riches to read your notes over and over and over which is really boring and which is really bad for helping you retain what you’re trying to learn. So my number one study tip is study groups. So before you get off this video, let me tell you I know a lot of you were going to be resistant when you’re going to excuses why you don’t want to do study groups or 1/2 study partners. Oh, my friends won’t like that old. I don’t have any friends in this class. That’s a lot of people say. Oh, yeah, they’re not good enough friends in that class. My friends aren’t good at this stuff. My friends wouldn’t want to do it Whatever Whatever It Is get over the excuse. You’re here for you. You’re here to learn as much as you can and get his good results as you can in school so that you can have a great future not so that you can get great grades not so that you can please your parents not so that you can get into a great college so that you have skills that have a great future. So now grades are a real thing. They’re necessary evil. So you want to do well on your exams and when you study if you study with other people you’re doing three things anytime you learn auditorily can aesthetically and Visually anytime you mix all three of these ways of learning anytime you learn visually by seeing auditorily by hearing and kinesthetically by movement. You will learn anything better. For example guitar. I can’t just read a book about guitar and know how to play guitar. I have to listen to guitar. I have to play kinesthetically with the guitar. I have to look at videos about the guitar instruction about the guitar. You want to mix all three types of learning when you study in a study group when you study with a study partner or as people who are testing you are you working with you do those things. You can aesthetically a lot of times there’s a lot of movement you might be using your hands to try to teach them things in while you’re teaching your friends thing, which is the best way to learn their teaching you things which is the best way to for them to learn your helping each other through the stuff. It’s not boring you can have food you can have fun. You can take your time. You can actually enjoy yourself you can joke around and it’s visual because you’re seeing each other but you’re also saying whatever materials you’re using bucks or videos or anything like that is definitely auditory cuz you’re communicating and speaking to each other. And it is the best way to study it is crazy how good this way is so now I teach people other ways, but I just really want to encourage you get out of your comfort zone call or text or email a couple friends arrange a study party set aside several hours. Not an hour or half-hour that’s nothing you want to set aside three or four or five hours for a study party have them bring food you all sit around you joke around you take your time and you dive into the material you test each other and you all try to help each other do well it is. My number one study tip because it works I get my college students to do it indefinitely middle school and high school kids are more resistant to this. But when I get my high school kids to do it there like holy cow. This was so good. I did so much better on my test was so much easier in that the point I want you to spend less effort doing things that are not fun more effort doing things that are going to get you more bang for the buck and go A lot out of it, and then we’re going to be fun and engaging her that are going to get you the results that you want. Any how do it don’t be resistant call some people today get it gone and good luck to you on your finals. If you have any questions or comments, go ahead and post them in the comments below or you can feel free to email me. If you want. Go ahead and click the Subscribe in the Bell now on you’ll get my updates every time. I do a new YouTube post and you can subscribe on my website for free tips for students specifically outside-the-box thinker students that are not your typical thinkers students with interesting brains who struggle with school school is not your Forte sign up. I’ll give you stuff that will help make your life better and easier. Have a great day.