![]() This plan had been in place since seventh grade. He was not to be called on in class and was exempt from doing presentations in front of his peers. I heard recently of an accommodation for a high school student with social anxiety. That coach must be familiar with the plan that, in a nutshell, expects anxiety to arrive, externalizes it (steps back from it, talks back to it, reacts differently to it) and experiments with the anxiety by taking steps toward the anxiety rather than away from it. And in my experience, weaning can happen quickly (weeks) once the skills are in place and everyone is working together.ģ) If a plan has been in place for several months or even years with no changes in a positive direction, then the approach to the child’s anxiety disorder should be evaluated.*Ĥ) If a plan allows a child to leave the classroom, there must be a plan for HOW the child will deal with the anxiety and return as soon as possible… and all involved adults must be aware of the plan.ĥ) A child will benefit greatly from an adult to coach and support her as she moves into anxiety provoking situations. When creating, updating, or reviewing an accommodation plan for anxiety, keep theseġ) All plans for anxiety should be based on teaching the skills of managing anxiety when it arrives, rather than eliminating or avoiding triggers.Ģ) Plans should have a “weaning off” component that moves the child toward more independence and less accommodation. To manage anxiety in a new way, the child must learn how to stay in the situation and thus respond differently to the thoughts, feeling and sensations that worry and anxiety create. If the accommodation plan is based on creating escapes, avoiding challenges and keeping the classroom “safe” (which to anxiety means keeping the environment predictable and comfortable) then adults are actually making the anxiety stronger and more permanent. ![]() Think of it this way: anxious children already know how to get out of things. Of course concerned adults want to keep anxious kids in school, but when the plan focuses on allowing a child to avoid anxiety-provoking situations, the child never learns the skills necessary to step toward challenges rather than away from them. Why? Because schools and parents act in a loving, caring, helpful manner…and seek to provide the student with the comfort and certainty that anxiety feeds upon. If you’ve ever heard me speak or are familiar with my approach to treating anxiety, what I’m about to say will come as no surprise: Regardless of what we call them, almost every accommodation plan I have ever seen for an anxiety disorder actually makes the anxiety stronger. ![]() I do many trainings in Canada and they have a similar process for educational plans that are created through IPP planning. Student abilities and challenges vary widely and we thus have an important federal statute (Section 504 of the Americans with Disabilities Act) that guarantees all children have equal access to educational opportunities. ![]() A lmost every accommodation plan I have ever seen for an anxiety disorder actually makes the anxiety stronger ![]()
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