WHAT DO STUDENTS WITH DYSLEXIA, ADHD, AND AUTISM NEED TO BE SUCCESSFUL? - NORRINE RUSSELL, PH. D.

“That student is impossible—they won’t do anything you

ask.” In a perfect world, all students

with multiple exceptionalities would be well understood

and effectively supported by all members of their

education and treatment team. In reality, that’s rarely the

case, despite the best intentions on the part of school

personnel and medical providers and the children

themselves. All professionals need to understand the

individual complexity of children with

multiple disabilities, meet them where they are at, and

have a variety of personalized strategies for helping

them to learn, grow, and develop. These ten guidelines

provide professionals a road map for what to consider

when working with complex kids with multiple

neurodevelopmental disorders. “Impossible” kids

become kids with remarkable potential when adults

change their lens and their own behaviors.

1. COMPLEX STUDENTS NEED US TO

OBSERVE AND LEARN ABOUT EACH ONE.

Individuate them from other students. All three of

these conditions can look very different in individual

students and when students have a combination of

neurodevelopmental conditions, it’s vitally important to

understand that particular student, their mind, and what

works and doesn’t work for them. Avoid generalizing

and making assumptions about students with dyslexia,

ADHD, and autism. Students with multiple diagnoses

are always complex students and it will take time to get

to know each one. As the saying goes, “If you’ve met

with one person with autism, you’ve met one person

with autism.” That is infinitely more true for students

with autism, dyslexia, and ADHD. A good question to

ask ourselves is, “How does this child’s exceptionalities

affect them? How do they manifest in this child?”

2. UNDERSTAND AND EDUCATE YOURSELF

ABOUT THE STUDENTS DIAGNOSES

AND COMORBIDITIES. AT A MINIMUM,

PROFESSIONALS SHOULD KNOW THE

FORMAL DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA FOR EACHDISORDER SO THEY CAN DIFFERENTIATE

SYMPTOMS AND BEHAVIORS.

Many times, actions that are undesirable or problematic

are labeled as behaviors or choices when in reality

they are symptoms. For example, when a teacher says,

“If Mason would just settle down in class and focus

better, he wouldn’t have a problem in this class. I know

he’s bright, he’s just not trying.” If adults working with

students like Mason understand that inconsistency in

effort and poor motivation for routine tasks is part of the

ADHD neurology, they would understand that coaching

his executive functioning skills is going to have a bigger

payoff than making assumptions or judgments.

3. KNOW WHAT IS AND IS NOT EVIDENCE

BASED INTERVENTIONS FOR DYSLEXIA,

ADHD, AND AUTISM.

Far too few people understand that there are

interventions that work for each of these disorders and

interventions that have very little scientific backing. It’s

imperative that when interventions are implemented,

the results are tracked. Multi-sensory instruction is

a strategy that should be helpful to students with all

three conditions, as should small group instruction and

manipulatives.

4. IDENTIFY KEY STRENGTHS IN THEIR

EXECUTIVE FUNCTIONING.

The Dawson & Guare model outlined in the Smart but

Scattered series of books is a useful framework for

doing this as it includes assessment questionnaires for

all ages, from young children through adults. In their

model, they identify eleven executive functioning skills in

a developmental order (Fig. 1). Help the student connect

these strengths to their goals and strategies for goal

attainment. “Liam, one of your best strengths is task

initiation. This means you often have an easy time

starting tasks in class or at home. You decided you

wanted to get 100% of your homework done this week–

let’s figure out how to use your ability to get

started to achieve your goal.”

5. IDENTIFY KEY CHALLENGES IN A

COMPLEX STUDENT’S EXECUTIVE

FUNCTIONING.

Identifying key challenges shifts the lens from

motivation or effort to seeing what skills might be

lagging. It’s important to recognize that the goal isn’t

to develop every skill perfectly but to identify the pain

points and provide scaffolding. “Liam, one of the areas

that’s hard for you is task completion (goal-directed

persistence). Let’s find three things to try this week to

help you finish your math homework after your initial

enthusiasm is gone.” A student with dyslexia, autism,

and ADHD may need more scaffolding for a longer

period of time and multiple accommodations. With

sufficient training and practice, education professionals

can coach executive functioning skills using a

multisensory approach, with a clear structure, breaks,

and rewards.

6. SET SPECIFIC, MEASURABLE, ATTAINABLE

GOALS WITH THE STUDENT.

Engaging the student at the very beginning of the

process is essential for success. Whether you create

the goals together or choose goals from a set of

possibilities (this can work better for some students with

autism), the student has to have voice and agency in

determining how their efforts will be directed. Use multi-

sensory methods to create checklists, prompts,

reminders, and progress reports. Goals should be

reviewed weekly, with the student reflecting or reporting

first and the professional adding their feedback after

listening and guiding the student’s input. For example,

“What went well this week, Nathan? Which goals did

you make progress on? How did you achieve that?”

From there, the discussion can shift toward questions

like, “What do you wish you had been able to do this

week that you didn’t? What got in the way?”

7. BASE YOUR GOALS ON DEVELOPMENTAL

AGE, NOT CHRONOLOGICAL AGE.

Students with ADHD can be delayed three years or even

30% of their chronological age in certain areas of

development. Furthermore, development tends to

be uneven across domains of development—that is,

one child could have verbal skills above most of their

peers, but have emotional development more akin to a

student three grades younger. However, we can’t simply

assume a developmental age—assessment is needed

in the domains of physical, cognitive, social, emotional,

and speech/language. Knowing the areas of strength

versus relative weakness is vital to understanding and

supporting that individual child. For example, Ethan,

a fifteen year old who has attended school and been

home schooled, has speech and language skills that

are off the charts. In terms of physical development, he

can’t print all of his letters, tie his shoes, or use eating

utensils. What does Ethan need? Praise and respect for

the skills he does have and slow, methodical practice of

fine motor tasks.

8. PLAN A SYSTEM OF REWARDS WITH THE

STUDENT.

As a general principle, rewards are anything of value

that reinforces the desired behavior. Rewards are far

more powerful than punishment and are especially

important for neurodiverse students. When students

with ADHD are being asked to do tasks that are non-

preferred or students with autism are being asked to

step outside their comfort zone, it’s important that their

efforts are rewarded in a way that is significant and

meaningful to them. These are some of the most difficult

tasks for students and their brain alone may not send

them a strong enough positive message. This is where

having designed a system of rewards with the student

becomes so valuable. The desired, highly valuable

reward helps the student overcome their anxiety,

rigidness, or lack of internal motivation. It’s important to

stress that the student must be involved in choosing

their rewards and setting up the milestones for earning

them.

9. USE BREAKS WISELY. USE ROUTINE

WISELY.

Students with multiple exceptionalities, even those

with above average intelligence or giftedness, can find

themselves more easily fatigued during school or when

completing academic work. Dyslexia is creating a higher

demand for cognitive processing, ADHD is distracting,

and autism can create sensory overload. When Daniel is

at school, he finds himself in need of more frequent

breaks to just allow his brain a time to rest. The five

minutes between classes is almost never enough for him, “I’m still thinking and rushing during that time to

get to my next class and be prepared while trying to

remember all the last minute directions from the last

class that I didn’t have time to write down.” Breaks allow

all people to have a sufficient pause, atypical students

may need a longer chronological period of time for

an effective pause. Routine also decreases stress in

that it lessens cognitive overload. When students know

what to expect and what will be expected of them, they

need less executive functioning skills and can harness

their cognition toward learning and analyzing content.

Sharise says, “My biology teacher is great! She always

starts class with a brief recap of the day before, tells us

the three major topics for the day, and ends with a short

five question quiz.” Because Sharise knows how class

is likely to flow, she can focus on learning biology not

figuring out what’s going to happen next. Breaks and

routines are equally important for complex students

and need to be individualized for maximum benefit. This

doesn’t have to mean an individualized schedule, simply

individual accommodations that work for that student.

10. CELEBRATE.

Sharing genuine joy and respect for a student’s

achievement is one of the best feelings in the world.

Avoid phrases like, “I knew you could do it” or “That’s

what happens when you work hard.” Instead use

phrases that develop the student’s own self-respect and

pride, such as, “How does it feel to achieve your goal?

When did you realize you were going to be successful?”

These types of questions also build the most important

executive functioning skill–metacognition.

These guidelines are not complicated to implement.

They require a shift in perspective, careful observation,

and flexibility on the part of professionals and parents.

The time spent understanding the individual child and

their unique profile of strengths and weaknesses pays

off significantly in helping students to create focus,

engagement, and connection. Remember, “If you’ve

met one child with autism, dyslexia, and ADHD, you’ve

met one child with autism, dyslexia, and ADHD.” They’re

not all the same.

Norrine Russell