Designed as a source book for teachers and therapists of mentally ill children. Basic procedures, activities, creative activities, and techniques which will promote social-emotional growth are emphasized.
Designed as a source book for teachers and therapists of mentally ill children. Basic procedures, activities, creative activities, and techniques which will promote social-emotional growth are emphasized.
LEARN TO MEET THE NEEDS OF YOUR GIFTED CHILD Though academic abilities have always been important in determining whether your child is gifted, talent in the visual or performing arts, leadership qualities, and intellectual curiosity are just as vital. But unless we as parents help nurture those talents, our gifted children can become bored, socially aggressive, or, ironically, underachievers in the classroom. Here is a practical, informative, and authoritative primer for raising and educating our gifted children from pre-school to adolescence. Beginning with sensible strategies to determine whether—and in which areas—your child is gifted, this book takes parents through selecting an appropriate day-care center, a school, and a home reference library. It helps us figure out where our role stops and the school’s role begins, as well as detailing ways to keep our children’s creativity alive and how to cope with sibling rivalry and our own doubts and fears. Also included are a recommended reading list, a special section on the roles of the computer and television in your gifted child’s life, and much more.
The public schools have taken on increasing responsibility over the last decade for providing in-school educational services to chil dren with low-incidence handicaps, children who, not very many years ago, would have been relegated to custodial care or limited to care only in the home. With the increasing responsibility for educating these children has come recognition that few of us have the requisite knowledge or skills to deliver high-quality services to these chil dren. University programs are providing more staff, but the existing staff must also be trained. We have been involved for several years, with the special education branch of the Nebraska Department of Edu cation in the provision of in-service training in the early identifi cation and assessment of handicapping conditions, when we realized an even greater need for training regular classroom teachers, administra tors, and psychologists in addition to early childhood special educa tion personnel about the nature of low-incidence handicaps and how they might be dealt with in the public school setting. Knowing the enormity and the expense of such an undertaking, we tenuously ap proached the State Department. They too were cognizant of this need and welcomed our ideas. Jan Thelen and her capable staff then took to coordinating the planning with us and the Nebraska Department of Education provided the fundings.
"While most mental health professionals possess a general knowledge of psychotherapy, not all are aware of the applications and special considerations that pertain to child patients. Unlike treatment for adults, a therapist treating a young patient must balance between cognitive and verbal work and the use of corrective emotional experiences- a balance that properly suits the developmental level of the child. Simply put, a therapist must do more and talk less with a young child, while the reverse generally applies with an older patient. Many books in the field describe either theories and/or techniques of child psychotherapy in general, or play therapy in particular. This book differs in two ways. First, it describes play therapy using cognitive developmental theory as an organizing framework and incorporates elements of a variety of other theories, techniques, and models of child psychotherapy. The result is a coherent theoretical model that fosters the therapist's ability to identify and interpret the multiple systems of which the child is a part. This model can be readily adapted for use in a wide variety of settings with children from infancy through adolescence who exhibit any of a host of psychopathologies."-- Book Jacket
This volume addresses key issues and assumptions about creativity as a potential discipline, making the progress of creativity studies more explicit and communicable to those within and outside of the field.