R&L Education
Pages: 200
Trim: 6⅜ x 9
978-1-57886-104-0 • Paperback • March 2004 • $59.00 • (£45.00)
Robert Jergen is an associate professor at the University in Wisconsin. He has and studies ADHD. He can be reached at RobertJergen@yahoo.com, and would greatly appreciate your thoughts regarding this book or about ADHD in general.
Chapter 1 Acknowledgments
Chapter 2 Preface
Chapter 3 A Brief Overview of ADHD—Understanding the Power
Chapter 4 1. Meet the Jergens
Chapter 5 2. Welcome to My World
Chapter 6 3. Send in the Teachers
Chapter 7 4. Junior High: Heroes and Hope Gone
Chapter 8 5. Hobbits, High School, and New Homes
Chapter 9 6. Boilermakers and Fuzzy Navels
Chapter 10 7. Rebecca and the Adult World
Chapter 11 8. EEG, MRI, A-OK
Chapter 12 9. Storming the Gates of the Ivory Tower
Chapter 13 10. Life after School
Chapter 14 11. A Look at the Present
Chapter 15 12. Strategies for Changing My Environments
Chapter 16 13. Strategies for Learning to Learn
Chapter 17 14. Strategies for Building Emotional Support
Chapter 18 15. A Look Behind
Chapter 19 16. A Look Forward
Chapter 20 17. Some Suggestions for Parents, Teachers, and People with ADHD
Chapter 21 About the Author
Robert Jergen's The Little Monster: Growing Up With ADHD, is a must-read for parents, teachers, and employers who want to understand the world of those who have attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder. The central message of this book...is very positive....chapters...offer strategies and suggestions—for those with ADHD... Jergen's memories and ideas are insightful...and instructive.
— Jerry McGovern; Press-Republican, (Plattsburgh, Ny)
Jergen...tells of his struggles growing up with...ADHD, and describes how...he turned his ADHD into an asset that enabled him to get a PhD, become a tenured professor at the age of 34, and publish five books in two years.
— Reference and Research Book News
Jergen's book is one more in an increasing number of titles about how people can overcome the stigma of growing up with a disability that was unheard of during their childhoods....This is an interesting book, particularly for concerned parents of children with ADHD.
— Choice Reviews
Robert Jergen is an engaging writer and, as an autobiographer should, he knows his subject very well. Many of his points about the difficulty of diagnosing ADHD and the high incidence of misdiagnosis will be useful for readers.
— Metapsychology Online
Robert Jergen . . . has done us a favor by telling the story of ADHD—Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder—from the perspective of the child.
— Green Bay Press-Gazette, (Wisconsin)
• Winner, ForeWord Magazine 2004 Book of the Year Award finalist