Title: Attention Strategies for Preschoolers
1Attention Strategies for Preschoolers
- By Laura Kavlie, Lauren Jakubowski, Kerri
Rothanzl - Preschool Interventions
- May 2009
2What Will You Learn?
- Development of attention, including attention
control - Red Flags for Attention Problems
- Universal Classroom Strategies
- Classroom Environmental Modifications
- Child Interaction Strategies
- Intervention Programs
- Brainstorming Attention Strategies
3Aspects of Attention
- Select
- Maintain
- Switch
- Shift
- Share
- Divide
- Ignore
Linder, 2008
4Early Development of Attention
- Birth 3 months
- Stimulus Orienting is present at birth
- 3 18 months
- Sustained Attention develops
- 18 months and Up
- Executive Functioning (i.e. planning, organizing,
inhibiting actions, etc.) emerges and develops
5Development of Attention Control
- 0-1 Years Extreme distractibility
- 1-2 Years Single channelled attention
- 2-3 Years Adult-directed attention shift
- 3-4 Years Shift attention spontaneously
- 4-5 Years Attention is two channelled
- 5-6 Years Gradual ability to ignore distractions
6Developmentally Appropriate Behaviors
- Runs in circles
- Doesnt stop to rest
- May bang into objects or people
- Asks questions constantly
n.a., 1996
7Developmental Length of Attention (Approximate)
- 2 years 7 minutes
- 3 years 9 minutes
- 4 years 13 minutes
- 5 years 15 minutes
- 6-7 years 60 minutes
8Red Flags for Attention Problems
- High distractibility
- Impulsive behavior
- Unusual restlessness (hyperactivity)
- Difficulty staying on task
- Difficulty changing activities
- Constant repetition of an idea (perseveration)
Rief, 2005
9Is Attention a Problem?
- Observe the behavior
- In what activities does the child spend the most
and least amount of time? - How does the child approach and first engage in
activities? - How does the child leave activities?
- Consider the implications
- Are you reinforcing the childs restless behavior
instead of the positive behaviors she displays?
Essa, 2003
10Is Attention a Problem?
- Explore Alternatives
- Is their attention span age-appropriate?
Appropriate for developmental level? - Are the offered activities age-appropriate?
- Be aware of ADHD symptoms and make a referral if
necessary - Make a realistic goal including procedures to
obtain that goal - Gather baseline data to compare later progress
Essa, 2003
11Universal Classroom Strategies
- Keep circle time at a developmentally appropriate
length - Change sequence of routine during circle time
- Incorporate movement and exercise (songs with
rhymes and hand motions) - Have fidget toys and disco seats available for
children - Use visual cues (e.g., ringing bells and turning
lights on/off) - Use sign language
- Keep learning fun!
12Classroom Environmental Modifications
- Reduce noise distractions by
- Putting a carpet in the block area and dramatic
play - Putting dividers between different areas of the
room - Putting pictures on walls and curtains at windows
to help absorb sound - Keeping doors and windows closed, when possible
- Consider room arrangement
- Separate quiet and noisy areas
- Use dividers to separate interest areas (create
privacy in these areas to decrease distraction) - Arrange the room so that traffic patterns do not
interfere with activity centers
Essa, 2003
13Classroom Environmental Modifications
- Introduce new materials, new media, and new
activities to keep things interesting - Provide interesting/stimulating materials
- Provide a quiet place where the child can get
away from the stimulation of the classroom - Large cardboard box with throw pillows and one or
two simple activities inside - Create a quiet area with rules for only one
child at a time
Essa, 2003 Linder, 2008
14Classroom Environmental Modifications
- Hold or place objects at childs eye level
- Provide interesting/stimulating materials
- Prepare the environment ahead of time if the
child needs to perform a specific task - Use light to point (laser pointers or
flashlights) - Peer modeling
- Use headphones
Linder, 2008
15Child Interaction Strategies
- Reinforce the child for attending to activities
for increasingly longer times - Gradually decrease the interval between
reinforcements as the child stays with activities
for longer - Ignore nonproductive activity
- As soon as the child begins an activity or
focuses attention, give her appropriate
attention/reinforcement - Use proximal praise (give verbal reinforcement to
children around the child for paying attention)
Essa, 2003
16Child Interaction Strategies
- Model actions for the child
- Use objects of interest in an unusual way
- Talk the child through the task one step at a
time - Encourage a verbal child to explain what he or
she is doing - Avoid giving more than one direction at a time
- Change the typical rhythm of your voice
Rief, 2005 Linder, 2008
17Intervention Programs
18Shiny Light Bulb Strategy
- Increases students ability to self-regulate
attention level - Analogy of a light bulb to relate to attention
levels - Dark or unlit
- Dim (25 watts) Stop talking
- Semi-bright (50 watts) Stop moving around
- Brighter (75 watts) Stop looking around
- Very bright (100 watts) Stop daydreaming
- Students learn that each means to check and
self-correct their four STOP behaviors and save
the need for verbal redirection
Rief, 2005
19Attention Training
- Posner and Rothbart (2005) studied the effects of
attention training on 4-year-old children to see
if it might serve as a component of preschool
education. - Used the child version of the Attention Network
Test (ANT) - Alerting Network Score, Orienting Score,
Executive Attention Score - Results suggested that training exercises improve
executive attention, altering brain activity in
the anterior cingulate (EEG). - Underlying attentional networks are influenced in
ways that may lead to extensive generalization.
Posner Rothbart, 2005
20New Forest Parenting Package (NFPP)
- For preschoolers with ADHD
- Psychosocial interventions alone are not
recommended to treat ADHD - NFPP combines psychosocial treatment with
behavioral management techniques and parent
training - Key treatment goals
- Reduce parental negative reactions
- Promote appropriate limit setting
- Increase the quality and quantity of positive,
constructive interactions between parent and
child - Tailor motivation and scaffolding of attention
and self-organization to the child
Sonuga-Barke et al., 2006
21The Listening Program
- A music-based auditory stimulation method that
trains the auditory system to accurately process
sounds - Students listen to psychoacoustically modified
classical music through headphones exercises
the different functions of the auditory
processing system - Varied ochestration, tempo, octave, and meter
- Extensive techniques include filtration, audio
bursting, blending, spatial dynamics, and audio
morphing - The ear receives the musical sound waves, which
arrive in different frequencies to stimulate the
brain and help organize information received
ABT, 2009
22The Listening Program
- Can be used for the following problems
- Attention and concentration
- Listening
- Speech and language
- Memory
- Communication
- Sensory integration
- Self-regulation, etc.
- Controversial
- Limited empirical support for its efficacy
mostly case studies - Expensive
ABT, 2009
23- Brainstorming Attention Strategies
24References
- Advanced Brain Technologies (ABT), LLC. (2009).
The listening program Music-based auditory
stimulation. Retrieved May 13, 2009, from
http//thelisteningprogram.com. - Essa, E. (2003). A practical guide to solving
preschool behavior problems, 5th Edition. Clifton
Park, NY Thompson Delmar Learning. - Linder, T. (2008). Transdisciplinary play-based
intervention, 2nd edition. Baltimore, MD Paul H.
Brookes Publishing Company. - n.a. (1996). The broad continuum of attention
problems. American Academy of Pediatrics. - Nwora, A.J., Gee, B.M. (2009). A case study of a
five-year-old child with pervasive developmental
disorder-not otherwise specified using
sound-based interventions. Occupational Therapy
International, 16(1), 25-43.
25References
- Posner, M.I., Rothbart, M.K. (2005).
Influencing brain networks Implications for
education. Developmental Cognitive Neuroscience,
9(3), 99-103. - Richards, J.E. (2004). Attention.
- Rief, S.F. (2005). How to reach and teach
children with ADD/ADHD Practical techniques,
strategies, and interventions. San Francisco
Jossey-Bass. - Sonuga-Barke, E.J.S., Thompson, M., Abikoff, H.,
Klein, R., Brotman, L.M. (2006).
Nonpharmacological interventions for preschoolers
with ADHD The case for specialized parent
training. Infants Young Children, 19(2),
142-153.