The Social skills training by Antshel and Remer (Antshel & Remer,2010) has been tested with children ages 8-12 with ADHD. The training is composed of 8 meetings focused on the following six modules:
1. cooperation with peers
2. problem solving
3. recognizing and controlling anger
4. assertiveness
5. conversations
6. accepting consequences
Each training session is structured in the same way:

During the training, children earn points for attention, respecting rules or doing homework. These points can be used to access games or special activities during the last 15 minutes of the training.
The training also includes 3 meetings with parents:
1. at the beginning of the training, parents are informed about the training structure and methodologies, as well as the way to monitor their child behavior at home
2. during the fourth meeting, trainers assess progresses with parents
3. during the last meeting, trainers give parents a summary of the results.


The Social skills training by Abikoff (Abikoff et al., 2004) assigns children to groups of four. The program addresses five main functions:
1. Basic interaction skills
2. Getting along with others
3. Contact with adults at home and at school
4. Conversational skills
5. Problem situations
Trainers use modeling, role-playing and evaluation of the previous meetings video-recording in order to identify appropriate and inappropriate behaviors. Trainers apply the following strategies to facilitate generalization:

Trainers use a rating system to evaluate the child both on general behavior and program skills every 20 minutes of each meeting. Ratings (+3 to −3) carried an equivalent number of points. At the end of each 60 minutes session, children have to be informed about the total of the points gathered. Starting from the seventh session, consequences were delivered at home.


The Child skills training by Pfiffner (Pfiffner & McBurnett, 1997; Pfiffner et al., 2007) is intended to improve skills for both the independence of the child and social skills. This training can be applied both to children with general ADHD and with ADHD-I.
The methods applied during the instruction are: didactic instruction, behavior rehearsal, in vivo practice in the context of a reward-based contingency management program, cognitive-behavioral strategies and role-playing.
The independence skills modules include:

Each training session is structured as follows:

Each week, children exchange earned stars from their home and school challenges for rewards.
At the same time of the children group, parents are involved in a group for them. The two groups are merged during the last 15 minutes of activities.
The child skills training lasts from 8 to 12 weeks.


The Behavioral and social skills (Tutty et al., 2003) is aimed at children with ADHD aged 5-12 years. The training program is intended to improve the management of both physical and psychosocial problems associated with ADHD.
The intervention is composed of 8, 50-minute group sessions. Children and parents are assigned to 2 different groups. Children groups are arranged by age.
Each training session is focused on a specific aim:

Every session is structured in the following way:


The UCLA Children’s Social Skills Program (Frankel & Myatt, 1997) consists of 12 x 1 hour per week sessions. It mainly focused on previously identified social skills deficits.
Each session is structured in following phases:
1. Report of the homework assigned to children (10 minutes)
2. Didactic presentation, behavioral rehearsal between children and coaching (15 minutes). For instance: conversational techniques; how to play detective to share information; how to make friends; how to play with other children; how to be a good host; how to face teasing, how to handle confrontation with adults.
3. Coached play (25 minutes): the children have to dispense token, verbal reinforcement, relevant comments to a playing dyad
4. Re-union with parental group and homework assignment (10 minutes). Homework is assigned as follows

The training includes parent sessions that are carried out at the same time of children training.


The ClassWide Peer Tutoring (CWPT) (Greenwood, 1997) is a peer tutoring instructional strategy aimed to improve student’s social competences and promote a good learning climate between peers.
CWPT can be summarized in the following steps:
1. The review, activation of prior knowledge, and introduction of new material to be learned
2. Preparation of weekly units/content materials to be tutored
3. New partners each week
4. Partner pairing strategies
5. Reciprocal roles in each session
6. Teams competing for the highest team point total
7. Contingent point earning
8. Tutors providing immediate error correction
9. Public posting of individual and team scores
10. Social reward for the winning team
A number of studies have applied CWPT in classrooms including students with ADHD. Evidence suggest that students participating in CWPT are actively and positively engaged with their peers while carrying out the CWPT program in an academic setting and in some cases increasing their on-task behavior (DuPaul & Henningson, 1993; DuPaul et al., 1998; Plumer& Stoner; 2005)