Description

Book Synopsis
Framing ADHD Children explores the three social worlds of Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: the home, classroom, and clinic. Through intensive interviews with teachers, parents, clinicians, and ADHD children, this book brings to light the human experiences surrounding this behavior disorder. The experiences of interview participants are supplemented with the most detailed historical discussion of ADHD to date, including the past and present debates about the true nature of the disorder, issues concerning children taking stimulant medications, and the continuing discussion of whether or not modern technology can really detect ADHD in the brain. Both the history of ADHD and the people interviewed here demonstrate that ADHD is far from a cut-and-dry phenomenon, but rather a complex social process that requires the negotiation of uncertainty and ambiguity at every step.

Trade Review
Highly recommended. * CHOICE *
Adam Rafalovich's Framing ADHD Children offers and effective example of how real-life narratives provide richness and multidimensionality to a topic, broadening his original hypothesis about attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) from the specific to the general. This provocative book has a place on the shelf of doctors, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, teachers, and parents. * Psychiatric Services *
This book artfully illuminates the controversial ADHD diagnosis by linking cultural discourses to lived experiences. It combines careful historical scholarship, insightful institutional analysis, and compelling interview materials. As such, it offers a powerful model for learning just how multiple personal troubles are transformed into emotional disorders. Along with Rafalovich's sociological colleagues, this book deserves to reach those who struggle daily to sort out the ambiguities surrounding proliferating drug treatments for a range of life difficulties. -- David A. Karp, Boston College

Table of Contents
Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Before We Called it ADHD: Idiocy, Imbecility and Encephalitis Lethargica Chapter 3 Psychodynamic versus Neurological Perspectives: Clinicians Discuss DSM IV and the Essences of ADHD Chapter 4 Clinicians as the Mediators of ADHD Suspicion and Treatment Chapter 5 The Realm of Semiformal Suspicion: Framing ADHD Children in the Classroom Chapter 6 Responding to ADHD: School Curricula, Simplified Assignments, and Gender Chapter 7 Parent Accounts: How Trouble Becomes ADHD Chapter 8 Developing Informal Expertise: How Parents Negotiate the Meaning of ADHD

Framing ADHD Children

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    A Hardback by Adam Rafalovich

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      View other formats and editions of Framing ADHD Children by Adam Rafalovich

      Publisher: Rlpg/Galleys
      Publication Date: 8/4/2004 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780739107478, 978-0739107478
      ISBN10: 073910747X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Framing ADHD Children explores the three social worlds of Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: the home, classroom, and clinic. Through intensive interviews with teachers, parents, clinicians, and ADHD children, this book brings to light the human experiences surrounding this behavior disorder. The experiences of interview participants are supplemented with the most detailed historical discussion of ADHD to date, including the past and present debates about the true nature of the disorder, issues concerning children taking stimulant medications, and the continuing discussion of whether or not modern technology can really detect ADHD in the brain. Both the history of ADHD and the people interviewed here demonstrate that ADHD is far from a cut-and-dry phenomenon, but rather a complex social process that requires the negotiation of uncertainty and ambiguity at every step.

      Trade Review
      Highly recommended. * CHOICE *
      Adam Rafalovich's Framing ADHD Children offers and effective example of how real-life narratives provide richness and multidimensionality to a topic, broadening his original hypothesis about attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) from the specific to the general. This provocative book has a place on the shelf of doctors, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, teachers, and parents. * Psychiatric Services *
      This book artfully illuminates the controversial ADHD diagnosis by linking cultural discourses to lived experiences. It combines careful historical scholarship, insightful institutional analysis, and compelling interview materials. As such, it offers a powerful model for learning just how multiple personal troubles are transformed into emotional disorders. Along with Rafalovich's sociological colleagues, this book deserves to reach those who struggle daily to sort out the ambiguities surrounding proliferating drug treatments for a range of life difficulties. -- David A. Karp, Boston College

      Table of Contents
      Chapter 1 Introduction Chapter 2 Before We Called it ADHD: Idiocy, Imbecility and Encephalitis Lethargica Chapter 3 Psychodynamic versus Neurological Perspectives: Clinicians Discuss DSM IV and the Essences of ADHD Chapter 4 Clinicians as the Mediators of ADHD Suspicion and Treatment Chapter 5 The Realm of Semiformal Suspicion: Framing ADHD Children in the Classroom Chapter 6 Responding to ADHD: School Curricula, Simplified Assignments, and Gender Chapter 7 Parent Accounts: How Trouble Becomes ADHD Chapter 8 Developing Informal Expertise: How Parents Negotiate the Meaning of ADHD

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