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Conducting a Feedback Session

Conducting a Feedback Session A Note from the Editor As with the past few issues, we are using the last issue of this, our Issue 5). The second article is by Sam Goldstein, entitled “What 30th and final volume, to reprint some of the more significant or I’ve Learned from 25 Years in the Field of Hyperactivity/ADHD.” clinically useful articles from the first 10 volumes of the newslet- Its lessons are as applicable now as they were when they first ter that remain as timely today as they were when first published appeared in the December 1997 issue (Volume 5, Issue 6). And in the 1990s. All of them deal with conveying essential ideas about the final reprinted article is my own, “Parents as Shepherds, Not ADHD to parents, patients, and loved ones. The first is by Mark Engineers,” from that same issue. Because of their continued time- Stein and Phillip Pearl on conducting feedback sessions with par- liness, we hope that by reprinting these articles they can be made ents and other caregivers following the assessment and diagno- far more accessible to an audience of readers accustomed to locat- sis of ADHD in a child or teen, although the topics covered are http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The ADHD Report Guilford Press

Conducting a Feedback Session

The ADHD Report , Volume 30 (8): 5 – Dec 1, 2022

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References (4)

Publisher
Guilford Press
Copyright
Copyright © The Guilford Press
ISSN
1065-8025
DOI
10.1521/adhd.2022.30.8.5
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

A Note from the Editor As with the past few issues, we are using the last issue of this, our Issue 5). The second article is by Sam Goldstein, entitled “What 30th and final volume, to reprint some of the more significant or I’ve Learned from 25 Years in the Field of Hyperactivity/ADHD.” clinically useful articles from the first 10 volumes of the newslet- Its lessons are as applicable now as they were when they first ter that remain as timely today as they were when first published appeared in the December 1997 issue (Volume 5, Issue 6). And in the 1990s. All of them deal with conveying essential ideas about the final reprinted article is my own, “Parents as Shepherds, Not ADHD to parents, patients, and loved ones. The first is by Mark Engineers,” from that same issue. Because of their continued time- Stein and Phillip Pearl on conducting feedback sessions with par- liness, we hope that by reprinting these articles they can be made ents and other caregivers following the assessment and diagno- far more accessible to an audience of readers accustomed to locat- sis of ADHD in a child or teen, although the topics covered are

Journal

The ADHD ReportGuilford Press

Published: Dec 1, 2022

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