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This book examines attachment-informed parent coaching to address
emotional and behavioral problems of young children. The volume
summarizes relevant developmental and attachment theory research
and describes how it supports an attachment-informed parent
coaching approach. The book addresses the challenges of parenting
young children with disruptive behavior or who are emotionally
reactive, and how mental health providers can help parents address
these challenges. Chapters describe how therapists can use their
observations of parents and children interacting to tailor parent
coaching according to different child and adult attachment
patterns. It discusses the important role of adult attachment in
tailoring parent coaching, including an understanding of how the
therapist's working model of attachment influences their work with
families. Each chapter includes information on current research as
well as rich examples of how this research can inform clinical
practice. Key areas of coverage include: The role of adult
attachment in working with young children. Addressing secure,
ambivalent/resistant, avoidant, disorganized, and controlling
child-parent dyads. Coaching parents who have a secure, earned
secure, preoccupied, dismissing, or unresolved working model of
attachment. Working with adopted children and children in foster
care. This book is an essential resource for researchers,
professors, and graduate students as well as clinicians and
professionals in developmental psychology, social work, pediatrics,
family studies, nursing, child psychiatry, pediatrics, occupational
therapy, and early childhood education.
This book examines attachment-informed parent coaching to address
emotional and behavioral problems of young children. The volume
summarizes relevant developmental and attachment theory research
and describes how it supports an attachment-informed parent
coaching approach. The book addresses the challenges of parenting
young children with disruptive behavior or who are emotionally
reactive, and how mental health providers can help parents address
these challenges. Chapters describe how therapists can use their
observations of parents and children interacting to tailor parent
coaching according to different child and adult attachment
patterns. It discusses the important role of adult attachment in
tailoring parent coaching, including an understanding of how the
therapist’s working model of attachment influences their work
with families. Each chapter includes information on current
research as well as rich examples of how this research can inform
clinical practice.  Key areas of coverage include:
The role of adult attachment in working with young children.
Addressing secure, ambivalent/resistant, avoidant, disorganized,
and controlling child-parent dyads. Coaching parents who have a
secure, earned secure, preoccupied, dismissing, or unresolved
working model of attachment. Working with adopted children and
children in foster care. Â This book is an essential resource
for researchers, professors, and graduate students as well as
clinicians and professionals in developmental psychology, social
work, pediatrics, family studies, nursing, child psychiatry,
pediatrics, occupational therapy, and early childhood education.
This practical guide provides a robust positive-parenting framework
for professionals coaching parents of infants, toddlers, and
primary school children. The first half of the book explains
behaviorist and attachment theories of parenting, comparing,
contrasting, and synthesizing them into an effective,
research-informed approach to practice. The second half shows these
guidelines in action, using play therapy as a means to improve
disruptive child behaviors, correct harsh parenting practices, and
address root causes of adversarial parent-child relationships.
Throughout these chapters, vivid composite cases demonstrate not
only common parent-child impasses but also therapist empathy,
flexibility, and self-awareness. This innovative text: Makes a
rigorous case for a combined behavioral/attachment approach to
parent coaching. Reviews current data on behavioral and
attachment-based parenting interventions. Details the use of an
attachment-informed approach to providing behavioral interventions
such as Parent-Child Interaction Therapy and Helping the
Noncompliant Child. Illustrates how parent coaching can be tailored
to match different patterns of attachment. Includes tools for
evaluating coaching sessions. Integrating Behaviorism and
Attachment Theory in Parent Coaching is an essential guide for
professionals, graduate students, and researchers in clinical,
child and school psychology, social work, pediatrics, mental health
counseling, and nursing.
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