A child may choose one of
several styles of reaction to a classroom that suppresses
her fundamental nature. Often children learn to repress
their natural inclinations and seek styles of behavior that
will win them praise and recognition. When a child chooses
some other reaction, such as rebellion, or simply cannot
repress a natural exuberance for learning and social
interaction, then the whole industry of academic
disciplinarians, psychologists, and physicians is brought
into the game.
The irony is that the industry sees itself as
humanizing the treatment of children. Instead of blaming
children for their antisocial behavior, this new field seeks
to identify a disorder that underlies the symptoms. The
identification and labeling of Attention Deficit Disorder
(ADD) and ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder)
provide a mechanism for its chemical investigation and
chemical treatment. When our children are distracted by the
world around them, impulsive in their pursuit of creative
ideas, and craving active exploration of the world and their
own innate urges, they are given a diagnosis. This
restrictive attitude gives a clear message about what we
value. The child receives the message that she needs to be
fixed. Parents become convinced that something is wrong with
their child. Then the child’s fundamental way of being in
the world is seen as a disease that requires treatment with
drugs. The use of these drugs, however, is fraught with
problems including many side effects (sleep disturbance,
appetite suppression, weight loss, growth delays, nervous
tics, loss of creativity, and depression). Drugging children
so they can conform in the classroom setting may be
thwarting our best intentions for developing innovative,
creative thinkers who can solve problems in unusual and
distinctive ways. Conformity may be leading our students to
mediocrity.
It is much more appropriate for parents to
understand their child’s attention skills so that a
combination of demystification, self-understanding, and
natural treatment pave the way to success. The problems
created by attention disorders should not be minimized.
Children are often demoralized or identified as
troublemakers if their distractibility, impulsivity, and
restlessness create significant classroom disruptions.
Several specific areas of attention dysfunction have been
correlated with learning problems. This is not surprising
since attention skills are required to accurately perceive,
store, and retrieve information. In one study, 73 percent of
a group of 422 children with attention dysfunction had
evidence of learning problems (Accardo et al., 1990). Other
studies have shown an association between the temperament
categories describing attention problems (distractibility,
low persistence, and high activity) with grades in reading
and achievement scores in reading and math (Martin and
Holbrook, 1985).
It should also be recognized and
acknowledged that creativity and attention “problems” often
go hand in hand. The highly creative individual has the
ability to take disparate pieces of information and join
them in completely new ways. Creative people are often
dissatisfied with the mundane and seek excitement. They tend
to be enthusiastic, restless, and impulsive—the same traits
that get them labeled with ADHD or ADD. Inventors,
innovators, entrepreneurs, and artistic geniuses of all
sorts have been diagnosed with attention disorder, either
during their life or posthumously (Thomas Edison, Ben
Franklin, Mozart, Walt Disney). There may be significant
value in having ADD or ADHD traits. And there is concern
among many researchers that Ritalin and other stimulant
medications used to treat symptoms suppress creativity
(Armstrong, 1997).