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Nancy Ratey
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  • wellesley, MA
  • United States
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Nancy Ratey's Page

Latest Activity

Nancy Ratey and Don Hasner are now friends
Jul 27, 2010
Nancy Ratey is now friends with Sarah Christine Gogstetter and Janet Rothstein
Jul 22, 2010
Nancy Ratey replied to Mssphoto's discussion How old was everyone when they found out they had ADD/ADHD?
"29-- and i WONT tell you what year that was! lol nancy ratey"
Jul 8, 2010
Charlotte Hjorth, ACG, PACG left a comment for Nancy Ratey
"We'll continue having great fun next time! I'll be seeing you in Atlanta for the CHADD Conference! :-) Hugs, Charlotte"
Jul 5, 2010
Nancy Ratey left a comment for Charlotte Hjorth, ACG, PACG
"SOOOOOO great to hear from you! i LOVED meeting you too! hugs! nancy"
Jul 5, 2010
Nancy Ratey and Charlotte Hjorth, ACG, PACG are now friends
Jul 5, 2010
Nancy Ratey received a gift from Jason Ruby
Jun 24, 2010
Mungo left a comment for Nancy Ratey
"Hello Nancy, Just wanted to say thank you for writing "The Disorganized Mind: Coaching Your ADHD Brain to Take Control of Your Time, Tasks, and Talents". I've read it about 5 times in a row - just received a diagnosis of ADHD a month…"
Jun 15, 2010

Profile Information

About me & Relation to ADHD?
I have ADHD and Dyslexia.
Website:
http://www.nancyratey.com

Just to save a little time, I am going to copy over my information from my webpages (hope you do not mind, I have ADD too and typing so much that I want to tell you so much about myself - it is much faster just to copy the information):

Meet Nancy Ratey
Ed.M., Harvard University
Diplomate, ABDA
Master Certified Coach, ICF
Senior Certified AD/HD Coach

Nancy A. Ratey is internationally recognized as one of the foremost authorities on personal and professional coaching for adults with and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD). As one of the founders of the ADHD coaching profession, Ms. Ratey has been active for the last two decades in developing programs and lecturing on issues related to ADHD. Ms. Ratey has served as past President of the Attention Deficit Disorder Association (ADDA).

In the field of ADHD coaching, she has been influential in designing and implementing the first comprehensive training programs for ADHD coaches. Her work continues to shape and direct the field of ADHD coaching. Ms. Ratey was chair of the national committee that created the Guiding Principles for ADHD Coaching, the pre-eminent document in the field.

Having dyslexia and ADHD herself, Ms. Ratey engineered her own road to success. Ms. Ratey graduated from The Ohio State University in 1982 and, in 1991, she earned a Master’s degree in Education from Harvard University, specializing in administration, planning and social policy. While employed as a resident student advisor at Harvard, she began working one-on-one with ADHD students who came to her because they knew she was personally familiar with their struggles. At Harvard, she started a speaker series that not only encouraged students to seek accommodations from the administration, but which also helped shape Harvard’s policies on working with students with learning disabilities and ADHD. She became a leader in the field of disability rights and was invited in 1988 to give expert testimony to a congressional committee concerning the historic Americans with Disabilities Act.

Ms. Ratey is a Master Certified Coach and Senior Disability Analyst. She writes extensively on coaching and ADHD topics and has co-authored two books, Tales from the Workplace and Coaching College Students with AD/HD: Issues and Answers. She has also contributed chapters and articles to numerous publications. Her latest book The Disorganized Mind: Coaching Your ADHD Brain to Take Control of Your Time, Tasks, and Talents was published in April of 2008 by St. Martin’s Press.

Apart from serving as the past President of ADDA, Ms. Ratey has served on the professional advisory boards of several leading ADHD organizations, including Children and Adults with Attention Deficit Disorder (CHADD). She is a current board member of the Edge Foundation. She has also directed her energy at developing and delivering programs and conducting training for various organizations, including Harvard University, Dartmouth College, and the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.

Ms. Ratey and her work are often profiled in the media, including ABC, CBS, NPR Radio, and national publications such as Wired, Cosmopolitan, Vogue, The Boston Globe, and The New York Times.

Ms. Ratey often collaborates with her husband, Dr. John Ratey, M.D., a world-renowned researcher and neuro-psychiatrist, and the acclaimed author of A User’s Guide to the Brain and the recently released Spark, as well as co-author of the national best seller Driven to Distraction. He specializes in the diagnosis and treatment of ADHD. Nancy and John keep abreast of the latest research and techniques for solving ADHD-related problems from both a medical and coaching point of view. For more information about John Ratey and his publications, visit www.johnratey.com.

Nancy Ratey’s own experiences living and working with learning disabilities and ADHD enable her to understand her clients’ difficulties from an intuitive level and ito help them move forward to achieve greater success in their own lives. Currently, Ms. Ratey runs a private coaching practice and consults to businesses and educational institutions. She specializes in coaching senior executives, entrepreneurs, and highly motivated professionals with ADHD.

She lives in Wellesley, MA with her husband and two dogs.

*******

About my new book:

The Disorganized Mind Address Common Issues Confronted by the ADHD Adult

For the many millions of adults diagnosed with ADHD, The Disorganized Mind provides expert guidance on what they can do to make the most of their lives. The inattention, time-mismanagement, procrastination, impulsivity, distractibility, and difficulty with transitions that often go hand-in-hand with ADHD can be overcome with the unique approach that Nancy Ratey brings to turning these behaviors around.

“Where did the time go?”
“I’ll do it later, I always work better under pressure anyway.”
“I’ll just check my e-mail one more time before the meeting…”
“I’ll pay the bills tomorrow – that will give me time to find them.”
The strategies for managing time, staying on task, and accomplishing your goals are simple, and they work:

The Parking Lot

Distracted by something you need to do later? Get it out of your mind by writing it down on your ‘parking lot’ note pad, where it will be safely stored for later.

Beat the Clock

Have a deadline on a report? Take your laptop to the park, pop in the battery, and get going. Watch the power drain as your report gets done. Hit save before the battery runs out!

Many individuals with ADHD live in turmoil. It doesn’t have to be that way. Professional ADHD coach and expert Nancy Ratey understands the challenges faced by adults with ADHD from both a personal and professional perspective. By using the proven ADHD strategies she discusses, they can learn how to organize, plan, and prioritize to clear the hurdles of daily living with a confidence and success never before dreamed possible.

Visit my website about my book and where you can purchase it:

http://www.thedisorganizedmind.com


Comment Wall (22 comments)

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At 12:10pm on July 5, 2010, Charlotte Hjorth, ACG, PACG said…
We'll continue having great fun next time!
I'll be seeing you in Atlanta for the CHADD Conference! :-)
Hugs,
Charlotte
At 6:45am on June 15, 2010, Mungo said…
Hello Nancy,
Just wanted to say thank you for writing "The Disorganized Mind: Coaching Your ADHD Brain to Take Control of Your Time, Tasks, and Talents". I've read it about 5 times in a row - just received a diagnosis of ADHD a month ago, I'm 39 now. It is such a helpful book, the strategies and explanations of ways of thinking have been very enlightening.
The section about Transitions has been especially helpful, I think - I tend to get anxious when situations change abruptly (unless it is a crisis situation, when of course I get very calm and controlled and in charge).
All the best,
Mungo
http://MungosADHD.com
At 10:24am on January 17, 2010, Rudy said…
hello my name is Rudy Sims just wanted to say hi and wish you a happy new year :-)
At 10:51am on October 14, 2009, Joan Azarva said…
I am the parent of an LD/ADD son, and it seems like yesterday that I was in the trenches. I remember the anxiety in 12th grade, feeling uncertain about whether my son could "do" college (he WANTED to go).

Fortunately, besides being a parent, I've also worked with LD students on the college level since 1993, 13 of those years as a college Learning Specialist. In addition, I have my Master's Degree in Education from the University of PA, one of the finest schools in the country.

As a result, I KNEW how to prepare my son, how to "vet" colleges (you can't believe what they tell you or what you read on their website), how to determine how much support my son would need, how to make the best match, and those decisions and strategies that bode for college success. My son, never a "student", graduated college successfully and obtained a job in his field.

Most students with LD fail on the college level - the statistics are abysmal. The ONLY way we can change this is to prepare them for college's unique challenges - it is VERY different from high school!

If you are the parent of a teen in grades 9 - 12 and would like a free teleseminar, "How College Savvy Are You", register at: http://www.conquercollegewithld.com/coaching.html. This is a coaching course - the first lesson is FREE for everyone, with no payment due, and no obligation to continue.

You can also benefit from my totally free subscription list that sends out high-quality weekly articles pertaining to postsecondary transition -- http://www.conquercollegewithld.com.

I have been passionate about college success for our kids since seeing my own son do it. His victory was not accidental, however; it was the result of difficult and deliberate decisions, all worth it in the end.

If your teen is of normal intelligence, WANTS to go to college, acknowledges his LD, and will accept help, success is PROBABLE..... assuming you have all your "ducks in a row".
At 2:27pm on March 30, 2009, bythesea said…
Hi Nancy. Wow, your book sounds perfect for me - 3 of the 4 quoted statements above sound so familiar! Will definitely look for the book. I may also recommend it to an artistic seminary classmate of mine who has both ADHD and Dyslexia. It's because of her that I'd discovered ADD might be a factor in my life.
Peace, bythesea
At 8:13am on February 21, 2009, Dana Arcuri said…
ENJOY YOUR WEEKEND Pictures, Images and Photos
At 5:54pm on January 20, 2009, Dana Arcuri said…
Hi! I have a beauty group on ADDer World called "GIRLY GIRLS BEAUTY GUIDE" and you are welcome to join the group. It is a fun place to share our beauty tips and techniques! Have a wonderful day!

Warmly,
Dana
At 5:01pm on January 18, 2009, ReneeA68 said…
Bravo! I am very impressed by the scope of your achievement! Speaking as one of the many kids who didn't (almost couldn't) finish HS due to my myriad difficulties with controlling distractions, math anxiety, family dysfunctions so common to individuals with "merely" one learning issue -let alone TWO- I commend your example of what can be achieved :) I have two children with AD/HD and would not have known about my own but for my daughter's diagnosis. I am at work on my own writing project, and I do find the task very daunting to fit it into being a single mom, work, of course my kids, and trying to have a social life again.
I've often thought about getting a coach for my son. He's a doll -super smart, heart the size of Alaska, fired up about his own projects... but he struggles so socially (it's mystifying to him why kids want to hurt him) and staying on task for paperwork. He has dysgraphia as well, so that does NOT make it easier. As I mentioned, I am a single mom and really kind of scrape by. Do you know of any programs I might appeal to in finding financial assistance for this type of thing?
I want him to find his potential. I know he has SO far that he can go. I just don't know if I have all the tools to help him get there and I would love to have advice or another person (coach-type) who can give him more input.
Thanks for all you do!

-Renee
At 7:49pm on January 2, 2009, Sarah Christine Gogstetter said…
hi nancy, i've read your book and enjoyed it.
At 1:43pm on December 24, 2008, Dana Arcuri said…
Wishing you and your family a very MERRY CHRISTMAS and a HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Happy Holidays Pictures, Images and Photos
 
 
 

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