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It's So Much Work to be Your Friend
Richard Lavoie
Touchstone
August 2005
448 pages ISBN: 0743254635 Hardcover
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Non-Fiction
As any parent, teacher, coach, or caregiver of a learning
disabled child knows, every learning disability has a
social component. The ADD child constantly interrupts
conversations and doesn't follow directions. The child with
visual-spatial issues loses his belongings and causes his
siblings to be late to school. The child with
paralinguistic difficulties appears stiff and wooden
because she fails to gesture when she talks. These children
are socially out of step with their classmates and peers,
and often they are ridiculed or ostracized for their
differences. A successful social life is immeasurably
important to a child's happiness, health, and development,
but until now, no book has provided practical, expert
advice on helping learning disabled children achieve social
success. For more than thirty years, Richard Lavoie has lived with
and taught learning disabled children. His bestselling PBS
videos, including How Difficult Can This Be?: The F.A.T.
City Workshop, and his sellout lectures and workshops have
made him one of the most popular and respected experts in
the field. At last, Rick's pioneering techniques for
helping children achieve a happy and successful social life
are available in book form. It's So Much Work to Be Your Friend offers practical
strategies to help learning disabled children ages six
through seventeen navigate the treacherous social waters of
their school, home, and community. Rick examines the
special social issues surrounding a wide variety of
learning disabilities, including ADD and other attentional
disorders, anxiety, paralinguistics, visual-spatial
disorders, and executive functioning. Then he provides
proven methods and step-by-step instructions for helping
the learning disabled child through almost any social
situation, including choosing a friend, going on a
playdate, conducting a conversation, reading body language,
overcoming shyness and low self-esteem, keeping track of
belongings, living with siblings, and adjusting to new
settings and situations. Perhaps the most important component of this book is the
author's compassion. It comes through on every page that
Rick feels the intensity with which children long for
friends and acceptance, the exasperation they can cause in
others, and the joy they feel in social connection. It's So
Much Work to Be Your Friend answers the most intense yet,
until now, silent need of the parents, teachers, and
caregivers of learning disabled children -- or anyone who
is associated with a child who needs a friend.
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