Hyperactivity
and Four Year Old Children
By Alison Van
Dyk
Hyperactivity in four year olds takes many
forms. Usually the child who is problematic from the first day of school is
identified as hyperactive. Some of the causes of hyperactivity in children
are: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Trauma or reaction to
traumatic or violent events, Abandonment or Death of a parent, Oppositional
Defiant Disorder, Learning Differences, etc. It could also be the result of
a combination of the above. The following case describes an example of a
child for whom Play Therapy and Sandplay was helpful in diagnosing and
treating the cause of his hyperactivity. This child attended a preschool
program that I am the director of for a school in the South Bronx, NY with a
predominantly Hispanic population.
Jason was small for his age and very bright. He was three years 4 months at
the beginning of the year. He had trouble settling down at circle time,
could not stay with any one activity for any period of time and was
constantly getting into trouble for his impulsive behavior, hitting other
kids and getting into fights. He was not so much aggressive, as he was out
of control and disruptive in class. This was his first group experience away
from home. His father and mother had been separated for 1-1\2 years and he
has a younger brother, age 2.
In talking to the parents separately for
conferences, it became clear that Jason had witnessed domestic violence at
an early age. His mother was open about the verbal and physical fights that
she and her husband had had. He continued to have difficulty during the year
when he visited his father and new partner.

In response to one of the
nonverbal tests given to children in the beginning of the preschool program,
the LADS or Levy-Wiedis Animal Drawing Story Test, Jason said: “Somebody was
fighting with the kids and they gonna take him to jail”. That somebody was
his father who created a volatile domestic scene wherever he lived. His
father also had problems with the court around childcare payments and
responsibility issues. Jason had witnessed the police being called to break
up a fight while his parents were together and then again during visits to
his father’s house. As if this was not enough for a four year old to deal
with, Jason’s mother was in treatment for cancer and was in and out of the
hospital that year. He was painfully aware of what death was and we had many
conversations about Selina, the beautiful Hispanic singer from LA who was
killed by a jealous employee. He told me that he and his mother cried when
they saw that movie.
Most of the Play Therapy
goals included helping him to nonverbally process his traumatic experiences,
gain confidence in himself and learn to manage his behavior in terms of the
class demands. Jason was able to use the therapy sessions including Art
Therapy, Sandplay and Drama to process his feelings and learn to accept the
limits that his parental situation dictated. In class however, he continued
to show hyperactive behavior. He scored on the Burks Behavior Rating Scale:
Very Significant for Poor Attention and high in Significant for Poor Impulse
Control, Poor Reality Contact, and Poor Social Conformity. If we look at the
behavior Jason was exhibiting, we might think that he had ADHD. Many
psychiatrists and pediatricians might prescribe medications for a child like
this. And of course I thought about a referral for an evaluation. However,
there were too many psychological factors that were a result of Jason’s
witnessing of family violence, the threat of abandonment by his father and
fears around loosing his mother to cancer. All of this led me to think that
Sandplay would be a treatment of choice to help Jason express his anxiety
and worries in a safe and nurturing environment.
In subsequent Sandplay
sessions, Jason worked on his father issues using Darth Vader as the
dangerous Dad whom he has to call Mom for help with during two home visits.
I have no doubt that Jason was terrified by his father’s aggressive
behavior. However, he also loved his father and craved his attention. His
new partner told Jason’s father that when their first baby was born, she
didn’t want him to see his children from his first marriage. In April the
baby was born and Jason’s father stopped the home visits. Eventually, as the
reality of the final rejection by the father set in, Jason saw himself as
the cause of the father’s rejection, a common reaction in young children.
Jason drew this LADS picture in May.

The Animal of his story is
the turtle to the left and to the right is a mouse, which he is feeding
(green food). This drawing symbolizes his acceptance of the family dynamic
and his need for protection from painful feelings. Parental abandonment is a
very challenging experience for a child. To the right he feeds a mouse. He
is transitioning from desperately wishing for a relationship with his father
to wanting to take care of his mother. She is getting married over the
summer and Jason is looking forward to a new stepfather. Notice that he has
depicted his individuation in this drawing by the two creatures that are
separate from the large open circle above. In his first drawing at the
beginning of the year, the two red and blue circles are still inside or not
quite fully free of the large circle, the image of mother, womb, etc. Now
that he has accepted the finality of not seeing his father, Jason was more
open to the new father he was about to have in his life. However he did have
some other concerns that needed to be dealt with.
In some of his answers to
questions on the LADS test, Jason says that the animal might be dead (with
no one to take care of him) and that the animal worries about him “in the
woods by myself”. He also states that the father does not like the animal.
He needs help with his guilt that he may have actually caused the father’s
rejection. He is also openly expressing his anxieties and lifting the burden
that he has been carrying, a fear of a second abandonment due to his Mom’s
illness. In class he shows improvement in his adjustment to the other
children. In answer to the questions, the animal feels liked and accepted by
others. He is still unsure of his academic abilities but his answers
indicate that he sees himself as smart, happy and good, all improvements.
His Burks Behavior Rating
Scale scores for the end of the year showed significant progress in some of
the behaviors that therapy sought to address. Poor Attention went down
(improved) from Very Significant to Not Significant, a drop of 15 points.
The other scores were Poor Impulse Control which went up (worsened) 8 points
and Excessive Aggression, which went up 5 points. Poor Anger Control stayed
the same. Poor Social Conformity improved by 5 points and Reality Contact
improved by 1 point.
Jason had made significant
progress in dealing with his hyperactive behavior. With the help of Sandplay,
he began to accept his feelings of loss and fears of abandonment. He learned
how to control himself better is school and stay focused rather than going
from activity to activity without completing any one thing. Jason still had
to work on impulse control and aggression. This would take more time.
Although he has some challenges ahead, it was decided that Jason was ready
for kindergarten. This also means the end of therapy for children leaving
the program. In this school system, if a child continues to exhibit
problematic behavior, they are referred to the Board of Education Social
Worker for further help.
The act of making a picture
with toys or figures in the sand is a right brain, non-verbal activity. It
is a communication skill that is developed during the process. Children
learn to use it to think through problems and see their issues in a more
reflective way. One feels the images and resonates with their meaning,
regardless of the age of the maker. Sandplay also helps a child to increase
their attention span. It helps a child look at where he is feeling hurt or
sad and come to a resolution around those feelings. In Jason’s case, this
allowed the energy that used to go into anxiety, to go into the important
activity of learning and growing. Too much worry and anxiety is unhealthy
for anyone, much less a four year old. The therapy program helped Jason to
accept that his father had chosen not to see his children and to see that
this had nothing to do with anything he had done. This also helped him to
accept a new stepfather. His mother’s health improved and he was able to end
the year at grade level academically.
Using Hyperactivity as a
diagnosis for three to four year olds has many advantages. It allows the
Play Therapist to evaluate the possible psychodynamic factors that may be
the root cause of the problem rather than assuming that the problem has an
organic cause like ADHD. It is also gives the child time to work through
emotional problems and remove the blocks to learning. If the hyperactivity
has not lessened after a year or two (preschool and kindergarten), then a
complete evaluation is needed and medication may be necessary.