The Reading Strategies Book 2.0
Jennifer Serravallo
Research-based reading strategies and lessons for every type of reader — a go-to reference for guided reading and intervention.
View on Amazon →Students who struggle to pay attention are not choosing to fail. They are experiencing genuine difficulty with self-regulation, impulse control, or cognitive fatigue. Understanding this changes how you respond.
Attention difficulties in K-3 can stem from many sources: developmental immaturity in executive function (normal and common in young children), ADHD, anxiety, learning difficulties (which cause frustration that looks like inattention), trauma, sleep deprivation, or sensory processing differences. Not all attention difficulties indicate ADHD — and many that look like ADHD are actually anxiety or learning struggles.
Important: This page does not address diagnosis. If you believe a student has ADHD or a related condition, refer to your school counselor and the family for a comprehensive evaluation. What this page provides are classroom strategies that help any student with attention challenges function better in your room.
Before assuming a student's attention problem is primarily internal, examine the environment. Visual clutter in the classroom workspace — too many materials on desks, busy backgrounds behind the board, competing visual displays — requires more filtering effort from all students and disproportionately affects those with limited attentional capacity. Reducing visual complexity in the primary instructional space reduces environmental demands before requiring students to manage them internally. Seating matters significantly too. Students who struggle with attention should generally not sit near the most socially interesting spots in the classroom — near the class pet, near the door, or next to their best friend.
Attention is not a fixed trait that students either have or don't — it's a capacity that varies based on task design, student interest, physical state, and instructional pacing. Lessons with high engagement, clear structure, frequent active participation, and appropriate challenge sustain attention better than passive, uniform-pace instruction. Specific strategies that support attention: short task segments with clear transitions (10-15 minutes per segment for K-3), active response systems (whiteboards, hand signals, partner talk) that require every student to produce a response rather than passively listen, and frequent teacher positioning changes that maintain novelty.
Classroom strategies should be the first response to attention concerns, not a formal evaluation. But when a student's attention difficulties are significantly more pronounced than developmental norms for the age group, have persisted across multiple settings and time periods, and have not responded meaningfully to classroom support strategies after 2-3 months, a formal evaluation is appropriate. ADHD evaluation involves assessment across home and school settings — your systematic behavioral observations and documentation of the student's response to classroom support strategies are essential input for that process. Share specific, dated observations rather than general impressions.
Teacher-tested books and classroom supplies we recommend for this topic. Explore the full list on our Recommended Resources page.
Jennifer Serravallo
Research-based reading strategies and lessons for every type of reader — a go-to reference for guided reading and intervention.
View on Amazon →Ross W. Greene, PhD
A collaborative, skills-based approach for understanding and supporting easily frustrated, chronically inflexible children.
View on Amazon →Classroom supply
Flexible seating that gives wiggly learners safe movement and better focus during seat work.
View on Amazon →Classroom supply
A quiet fidget set to help students self-regulate without disrupting the room.
View on Amazon →As an Amazon Associate, TeAndrea Burnett Tutoring earns from qualifying purchases. Buying through these links costs you nothing extra and helps keep these resources free. See our disclaimer.