Social Skills for ADHD

How to support social skills in children with ADHD

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Having positive peer relationships and friendships is important for all children. Unfortunately, many kids with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) have a hard time making and keeping friends and being accepted within the larger peer group. The impulsiveness, hyperactivity, and inattention associated with ADHD can wreak havoc on a child's attempts to connect with others in positive ways.

Not being accepted by one's peer group, feeling isolated, different, unlikeable, and alone—this is perhaps the most painful aspect of ADHD-related impairments, and these experiences carry long-lasting effects. Positive connections with others are so important. Though kids with ADHD desperately want to make friends and be liked by the group, they often just don't know how. The good news is that you can help your child develop these social skills and competencies.

At a Glance

Remember, ADHD is a form of neurodiversity, not a problem to be "cured." To help kids with ADHD improve their social skills, focus on:

  • Developing stronger social awareness
  • Role-playing and modeling social situations to get extra practice
  • Creating opportunities for kids to build friendships
  • Working with teachers and coaches to boost a child's status with their peers

Building social awareness and managing their ADHD traits can help them form and maintain strong interpersonal relationships. Because they may struggle with aspects of executive function (like taking other people's perspectives and initiating conversations), practicing those skills can be beneficial. 

Increasing Your Child's Social Awareness

Research suggests that children with ADHD tend to struggle when it comes to monitoring their own social behavior. They often do not have a clear understanding or awareness of social situations and the reactions they provoke in others. They may feel that an interaction with a peer went well, for example, when it did not.

ADHD-related difficulties can result in weaknesses in this ability to accurately assess or "read" a social situation, self-evaluate, self-monitor, and adjust as necessary. These skills must be taught directly to your child.

ADHD characteristics like inattention, hyperactivity, and impulsiveness can affect a child's ability to form helpful social skills.

Plus, other kids might misunderstand or misinterpret your child's behavior. Lack of attention is sometimes seen as passivity or shyness. Impulsivity and hyperactivity may be seen as aggressiveness.

Working with your child to learn some of these skills and become more aware of how others may perceive their behavior can be helpful

Teach Skills Directly and Practice, Practice, Practice

Children with ADHD tend to have a hard time learning from past experiences. They often react without thinking through the consequences. One way to help these kids is to provide immediate and frequent feedback about inappropriate behavior or social miscues. Role-playing can be very helpful for teaching, modeling, and practicing positive social skills and ways to respond to challenging situations like teasing.

Start by focusing on one or two areas your child is struggling with the most. This helps ensure the learning process doesn't become too overwhelming.

Many kids with ADHD have difficulty with the basics, like starting and maintaining a conversation or interacting with another person in a reciprocal manner. For example:

  • Listening (asking about the other child's ideas or feelings, taking turns in the conversation, or showing interest in the other child)
  • Negotiating and resolving conflicts as they arise
  • Sharing
  • Maintaining personal space
  • Speaking in a normal tone of voice that isn't too loud

Clearly identify and give information to your child about social rules and the behaviors you want to see. Practice these prosocial skills. Shape positive behaviors with immediate rewards.

Create Opportunities to Build Friendships

For preschool and elementary school-age children, play dates provide a wonderful opportunity for parents to coach and model positive peer interactions for their child and for the child to practice these new skills. Set up these playtimes between your child and one or two friends at a time—rather than a group of friends. Structure the playtime so that your child can be most successful.

Think of yourself as your child's "friendship coach." Carefully consider the length of time a playdate will run and choose activities that will keep your child most interested.

As a child gets older, peer relationships and friendships are often more complicated, but it is equally important for you to continue to be involved and to facilitate positive peer interactions. The middle school and high school years can be brutal for a child who struggles socially. Even if a child remains unaccepted by the peer group at large, having at least one good friend during these years can often protect the child from the full-on negative effects of ostracism by the peer group.

Middle or high schoolers who have experienced social isolation and repeated rejection may feel desperate to belong to any peer group that accepts them—even one with a negative influence.

Research and get involved in groups in your community that foster positive peer relationships and social skills development like Boy Scouts, Indian Guides, Girl Scouts, Girls on the Run, sports teams, etc. Make sure the group leaders or coaches are familiar with ADHD and can create a supportive and positive environment for learning prosocial skills.

Communicate with the school, coaches, and neighborhood parents so you know what is going on with your child and with whom your child is spending time. A child's peer group and the characteristics of this group have a strong influence on the individuals within the group.

Work With the School to Improve Peer Status

Once a child is labeled by their peer group in a negative way because of social skill deficits, it can be very hard to dispel this reputation. In fact, having a negative reputation is perhaps one of the largest obstacles your child may have to overcome socially.

Studies have found that the negative peer status of children with ADHD is often already established by early-to-middle elementary school years and this reputation can stick with the child even as they begin to make positive changes in social skills. For this reason, it can be helpful for parents to work with their child's teachers, coaches, etc. to try to address these reputational effects.

Establish a positive working relationship with your child's teacher. Tell them about your child's areas of strength and interests, as well as what they've been struggling with. Share any strategies you've found helpful when working on your child's areas of weakness.

Young children often look to their teacher when forming social preferences about their peers. A teacher's warmth, patience, acceptance, and gentle redirection can serve as a model for the peer group and have some effect on a child's social status.

When a child has experienced failures in the classroom, it becomes even more and more important for the child's teacher to consciously find ways to draw positive attention to that child. One way to do this is to assign the child special tasks and responsibilities in the presence of the other children in the classroom.

Make sure these are responsibilities in which your child can experience success and develop better feelings of self-worth and acceptance within the classroom. Doing this also provides opportunities for the peer group to view your child in a positive light and may help to stop the group process of peer rejection.

Pairing the child up with a compassionate "buddy" within the classroom can also help facilitate social acceptance.

Use ADHD-Friendly Approaches

Collaborate with your child's teacher to make sure the classroom environment is as "ADHD-friendly" as possible so that your child is better able to manage ADHD symptoms. Work together with the teacher (and coach or another adult caregiver) on effective behavior management approaches, as well as social skills training.

Medication, when appropriate, is often helpful in reducing the negative behaviors that peers find off-putting. If your child is on medication to help manage symptoms of ADHD, be sure to work closely and collaboratively with your child's doctor. For the medication to provide the optimal benefit that it can in helping to manage the core ADHD symptoms, there is often an ongoing need to monitor, fine-tune, and make adjustments along the way.

Social skills training has been criticized for not affirming neurodiversity. A 2019 Cochrane Library review did not find any harmful effects; however, it found little evidence to support or refute whether social skills training was helpful.

Takeaways

Some characteristics of ADHD, such as impulsivity and problems with executive function, can sometimes affect a child's ability to make and keep friends. This can lead to social exclusion, which can have a devasting effect on a child's confidence and well-being. There are things you can do to help your child build their social skills, including practicing interactions, offering them opportunities to make friends, and ensuring their school is a safe, supportive, and encouraging space. With the right support and accommodations, kids can forge meaningful social relationships with their peers.

9 Sources
Verywell Mind uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
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By Keath Low
 Keath Low, MA, is a therapist and clinical scientist with the Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities at the University of North Carolina. She specializes in treatment of ADD/ADHD.