101 Reasonable Adjustments For ADHD

By Maggie Owolade

June 21, 2021


This is a 'must have' for all families and young people with ADHD who want their schools be better informed about how support them. Produced by Richmond ADHD, this guide provides bullet point suggestions for children and young people to give their teachers. Simple, effective strategies!

Reasonable Adjustments for ADHD

Schools have a statutory duty under Equality Act 2010 to take such steps as is reasonable to have to take to avoid substantial disadvantage to a disabled child caused by a provision, criterion or practice applied by or on behalf of a school.

Most if not all children with ADHD will be deemed disabled under the Act.

This is an anticipatory duty and the school is required to take positive steps to ensure that disabled pupils can fully participate in the education provided by the school. 

The Act permits more favourable treatment of disabled pupils. The requirement applies irrespective of whether a child has a Statement/EHC plan or not.

What is “reasonable” varies according to the circumstances. The variables to be considered in assessing this include but are not limited to:

  1. Existing provision being made under the SEN framework
  2. School’s resources including financial and others
  3. Financial cost of making the adjustment
  4. The likely effectiveness of adjustment in overcoming the disadvantage
  5. Practicability of the adjustment
  6. Effect of the disability on the individual
  7. Health and Safety requirements
  8. Need to maintain academic, musical, sporting and other standards
  9. Interests of other pupils and prospective pupils

Further useful guidance is available from the EHRC: http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/publication/reasonable-adjustments-disabled-pupils

Here are some examples of adjustments that have proved helpful with ADHD children.

They are grouped under general heading albeit there is plenty of cross over.

Cognition and Learning 

1. Classroom positioning (front to avoid distraction or back to avoid need to look around or close to peer role models)

2. Break larger tasks down in to chunks in class and for homework

3. Accepting less or no homework

4. Providing facility for homework to be done at school

5. Provide sample work to model what is required

6. Reduce length of assignments required

7. Provide list of steps to complete task

8. Provide sample work to model what is required

9. Reduce length of assignments required

10. Provide list of steps to complete task

11. Provide reader

12. Provide scribe

13. Provide prompter

14. Allow extra time for exams/testing

15. Allow rest breaks

16. Allow use of lined answer sections

17. Allow peers to share notes

18. Allow use of ear defenders to reduce distractions

19. Allow testing in separate distraction free room

20. Allow extra time in class and in exams

21. Use timers

22. Give single step instructions

23. Teach specific memory techniques

24. Provide memory aids

25. Provide white noise

26. Provide headphones

27. Provide individual specialist teaching

28. Providing specialist computer programmes

29. Provide privacy partition

30. Personalising work topics to increase pupils level of intrinsic interest

Physical and Sensory

31. Provide with fidgeter

32. Provide with a stress ball

33. Provide with wobble cushion

34. Provide with weighted lap or shoulder ‘hug’ or blanket

35. Allow regular movement breaks

36. Allow touch typing instead of writing (handwriting/fine motor skills difficulties)

37. Provide with sloping board

38. Allow dictation

39. Allow photos with phone/iPad of written work instead of copying from board

40. Provide with copy of power point notes

41. Relax uniform requirements

42. Allow high calorie snacks if appetite issues

43. Provide adult support to supporting eating and hydration if needed

44. Allow oral presentation of work

45. Provide pencil grip

46. Use busylegs or equivalent

47. Use weighted blankets and other aids

48. Administer top-up medication

49. Allow gum chewing for hyperactivity in place of fidgeter so hands available to work

50.Provide occupational therapy

51. Provide sensory diet

Social Emotional and Mental Health 

52. Provide ADHD and equality training to staff

53. Plan to catch student doing the right thing and reinforceSeek out opportunities for child to show strengths

54. Provide opportunities for pupil to have positions of responsibility

55. Provide opportunity for pupil to develop relationship with those with responsibility for discipline

56. Provide counselling

57. Arrange structured activities during break time

58. Provide adult support for predictable trigger situations

59. Provide social skills training

60. Provide problem solving training

61. Provide conflict resolution training

62. Administer top-up medication

63. Depart from standard rewards policy to specifically reinforce progress in areas of difficulty

64. Depart from standard sanctions policy apply different sanctions

65. Disregard some behaviours

66. Teach emotional literacy 1:1 and small groups

67. Have calm space

68. Have nominated key worker

69. Provide counselling

70. Give child opportunities to be responsible

71. Use individualised reward system

72. Provide quiet place for lunchtimes

73. Pair with role model buddy

74. Provide extra support for changes e.g. trips, plays, supply teachers

75. Agree secret communication for behaviour feedback

76. Agree /plan alternative to calling out

77. Extra warnings for transitions between activities

78. Additional adult support for transition times

80. Provide anger management therapy

81. Raise peer awareness of ADHD

82. Provide play therapy

83. Provide nurture groups

84. Provide structured behaviour management programme

85. Provide additional adult support during less structured time

Language and Communication 

86. Actively teach social skill

87. Teach child active listening skills

88. Directly teach non-verbal cues

89. Provide speech and language therapy

Self-help and independence 

90. Teacher/TA check homework diary or provide written HW slips or emails

91. Provide reminders regarding work completion or organisation

92. Arrange homework handing in buddy

93. Arrange study buddy with contact details

94. Provide email access to subject teachers

95. Do not penalise for executive function related difficulties e.g. organisation forgetting things

96. Provide organisational skills training

97. Provide pupils with reading material with important points already highlighted

98. copy parents into work/organisation/trip emails/team sheets

99. Provide spare set of books equipment

100. Provide visual timetable

101. Provide visual checklists

Collated by Eva Akins for ADHD Richmond. Visit our website: adhdrichmond.org Facebook: facebook.com/AdhdRichmond YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/AdhdRichmond Tweet @AdhdRichmond Email: info@adhdrichmond.org 

About the author

Maggie Owolade is the Director of ARCS – a charity set up by parents to support families in Lambeth. A mother of four children, all with ADHD, ASD and other neurodiversities.