April 26 & May 3, 2025 from 9 am – Noon MST each day
Online via Zoom
Even highly motivated clients with ADHD struggle to follow through on the changes they need to make in their lives to improve their physical or emotional well-being. They know they need to change, they know what they need to do to change, they may even be able to take a step or two toward making those changes—and then they plateau or give up. What’s getting in the way is not their unwillingness or resistance to change, but weak executive skills.
Executive skills are underlying brain processes that help people manage their everyday lives, get things done, control their emotions, and help them manage obstacles that interfere with productivity and behavior change. Experts on ADHD now recognize that deficits in executive functioning lie at the root of this disorder. The frontal lobes, where executive skills are managed, don’t reach full maturation in typical adults until the middle of the third decade of life; in individuals with ADHD, a developmental lag slows down the process still further. As a result, many adults with ADHD fail to finish college, hold down a job or progress in a career, and struggle to maintain satisfactory relationships with friends and family. Failure and the recognition that they are working well below their potential erode self-confidence, eat away at self-esteem, and may lead to other mental health problems such as anxiety, depression, and substance abuse.
This seminar, led by one of the authors of some of the most popular and well-regarded books on the topic, including The Smart but Scattered Guide to Success, will share cutting edge neuroscience on executive functioning and will provide practical strategies clinicians can use with ADHD clients to help them work around or overcome the obstacles presented by weak executive skills. Armed with the knowledge gained in this seminar, participants will be able to help their clients assess their own executive skill strengths and weaknesses and create an action plan that is realistic and leads to true and lasting change.
As a result of attending this seminar participants will be able to:
• Outline the key role executive skills play in understanding adults with ADHD.
• Compare and contrast assessment tools to determine clients’ profiles of executive skill strengths and weaknesses.
• Direct clients on the best way to restructure their environment to reduce the impact of weak executive skills.
• Build a realistic change plan that enables ADHD clients to improve executive skills in situations and settings they identify as problematic.
• Discuss effective strategies ADHD clients can use to cope with executive skill challenges in the workplace, the home and in relationships.
• Identify tools to enhance 12 executive skill domains.
Regarding recordings – Attendance results in better learning outcomes. Provision of a recording is only at the discretion of SAOT.
NOTE – Recordings will not be provided except where a registrant has made a request in advance. Recordings will only be provided in the event of an extenuating circumstance – personal illness, personal injury or family emergency. When granted, a recording will be available for seven days.
Participants will receive a certificate of completion.
Who should attend? Occupational Therapists, Psychologists, ADHD and Executive Coaches, Psychotherapists, Mental Health Professionals, Social Workers, Marriage and Family Therapists, Case Managers, Vocational Counselors
About the Presenter
In over 40 years of clinical practice, Dr. Peg Dawson, Ed.D., NCSP, has worked with thousands of children and teens who struggle at home and in school. At the center of their struggles are often weak executive skills. Along with her colleague, Dr. Richard Guare, she has written numerous books on this topic for educators, mental health professionals, and parents, among them Smart but Scattered, Smart but Scattered Teens, Executive Skills in Children and Adolescents, and Coaching Students with Executive Skills Deficits. Peg is also a past president of the National Association of School Psychologists, and the International School Psychology Association, and is a recipient of NASP’s Lifetime Achievement Award.
In this episode, learn what is important about executive functioning and why this is an area that OTs need to learn more about.