By Sue Coleman, MCC, and Susan Sussman, M.Ed.
A comprehensive approach towards coaching people with ADD can be summarized in four words: structure, support, skills and strategies. Each is a focal point at various times in the coaching relationship; and sometimes all are provided or worked on simultaneously. Structure, support, skills and strategies are the building blocks used in providing an ADD client with a complete coaching experience.
STRUCTURE: Structure is a framework within which the ADD client can live his life. It provides the means by which an ADD client can be proactive (not reactive) in the face of chaos, paradox and change.
Structure consists of the following components:
SUPPORT: For ADD'ers who have spent their lives feeling blamed, criticized, and misunderstood, support is essential. In a support role a coach can serve a number of functions. First, clients need an opportunity to tell their story. Here the coach serves the role of witness and empathizer, someone who understands and has empathy for the client's journey Ð his past, current struggles and victories, and his future hopes and dreams.
Coaches also offer support in other ways as the coaching relationship unfolds: Feedback and support involve telling the client what you see them doing. For example, "It seems to me you are really efforting in your life right now. How can you make it easier for yourself?"
The coach can support the client and acknowledge their wins. Clients can start the check-in call with a list of wins accomplished since the last call. Coaches need to acknowledge clients' wins and encourage clients to acknowledge themselves. During this process the coach must be sure that the acknowledgement "lands," i.e., that the client really gets the message.
Coaches can also offer support by holding their client's vision Ð especially when the client forgets. Individuals with ADD can forget their vision when the going gets tough. At these times coaches can remind clients of their vision and help them get back on a forward-moving track.
Coaches can also champion their clients. This is the skill of standing for the client when they doubt or question their abilities. Championing occurs when the coach really knows the client. The coach can act as the client's memory, reminding them of their basic values, the path they have chosen, and their inventory of strengths.
Celebrating is another support-based coaching skill. The coach uses this skill to deepen the client's appreciation of their failures and successes. Celebration serves to deepen the client's experiences and appreciation of their lives at any given moment.
Clearing: When a client is preoccupied with a situation or mental state which gets in the way of resourcefulness or being proactive, the coach assists by being an active listener while the client vents or complains, helping the client clear the situation out of the way.
Creating trust: The coaching relationship rests on a foundation of safety and trust. To create trust, the coach discusses both confidentiality and safety. The coach offers the client the opportunity to verbalize the various ways the coach can be most helpful, and is specific about what the client can count on from him.
Finally in the area of support, the ADD coach can track progress and provide specific information and guidance each step along the way.
SKILLS: When individuals with ADD work on skill building, their worlds become more consistent and predictable.
The first step in the process of skill building occurs when the coach helps the client identify their strengths and weaknesses. Coaches help clients with the process of skill building and support clients in working from their strengths. Coaches can help ADD clients build the following skills:
Other areas in which ADD coaches work with clients include developing listening skills, social skills, and organizational skills.
STRATEGIES: Strategies are creative tools coaches use to help clients navigate their daily lives efficiently and achieve their goals. Lists of strategies can be as extensive as the creativity, skill and knowledge of the individual coach allow.
Although there is no one "right" way to coach clients with ADD, coaching that carefully examines how structure, support, skills and strategies can benefit each unique client will help immeasurably in creating a relationship between coach and client that fosters growth, learning, and change over time.
Sue Coleman, MCC, CPCC has a graduate degree in teaching/education from U.C. Berkeley and is a certified personal and professional coach and a practicing hypnotherapist. Sue teaches AD/HD coaching to prospective coaches, speaks regularly at national and local conferences, and has had several articles on AD/HD coaching published in national journals.
Sue Coleman can be reached at (510) 339-6197 or scoleman@world passage.net
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