In the early 1960’s, in order to remove itself further away from the inclusiveness of brain damage, the disease was again renamed, this time ‘minimal brain dysfunction’, which was inclusive of many disorders including: language disorders, learning disabilities, and dyslexia as well as hyperactivity. The 1960’s produced other monikers for the disease including ‘hyperactive child syndrome’ which, in the late 1960’s was replaced with ‘hyperkinetic reaction of childhood’. During the 1970’s it was the emphasis on the hyperactive component of the disease was questioned. It seemed, at that time, to be only a small part of the disorder and not the main focus, it was argued that the name completely dismissed the importance of the attention aspect of the disease. And then, ‘Attention Deficit Disorder’ was included in The Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-III, American Psychiatric Association, 1980), “with the publication of DSM-III in 1980, the American Psychiatric Association renamed the disorder ‘Attention Deficit Disorder…