Archive for May, 2005
Fidget to Focus is a Gold Mine
Full of tips and strategies collected over years of shared experiences, Fidget to Focus is a gold mine of information and sometimes surprising, sometimes heart-warming stories about how to stay focused and on track, even when tasks are dull, tedious, and boring.
—Thom Hartmann, author of Attention Deficit Disorder: A Different Perception.
No commentsI love Fidget to Focus
I love Fidget to Focus. I want to congratulate you on this wonderful and unique contribution to the field. Your book was very informative about how the ADD brain works and current understanding about the disorder, as well as the numerous practical, helpful sensory strategies for self-regulation that you shared.
—Sandra Rief, Author of How To Reach & Teach Children with ADD/ADHD: Practical Techniques, Strategies, and Interventions
No commentsFidgeting to stay focused… Imagine that!
Fidgeting to stay focused… Imagine that! Sounds counterintuitive, but that is just what Dr. Roland Rotz and Coach Sarah Wright are recommending in their new book, Fidget to Focus. Advocating repetitive sensory-motor activities as a fundamental strategy for improving attention and other cognitive abilities, they present a unique and fun way to turn outer chaos to calm focus.
—Patricia O. Quinn, MD, Director, National Center for Gender Issues and ADHD, author of a number of books on ADD.
No commentsThanks for your book!
Thanks for your book! As a veteran educator who worked with adolescents with ADHD for more than two decades, I felt validated by your explanation of these students need to fidget to focus.
“The first idea that the child must acquire, in order to be actively disciplined, is that of the difference between good and evil; and the task of the educator lies in seeing that the child does not confound good with immobility, and evil with activity. ” ~ Maria Montessori
- Kay Jones, B.A., M.S.
No comments