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Domestic Abuse Safety Planning with Young Children is a set
comprised of a beautifully illustrated storybook and accompanying
guide which focus specifically on safety planning with young
children, aged 5-7, experiencing domestic abuse. This book aims to
be accessible to all children from all families where safety
planning is needed and, as such, the characters in it are
non-gendered. In Pilgrim’s Bumpy Flight, Pilgrim is a little
plane who experiences frightening behaviour at home from Jumbo, who
represents the perpetrating parent. Pilgrim is comforted and guided
by Jet, who represents the victim/survivor parent, to think about
safety and what to do when frightening things are happening. The
story, which uses simple rhymes, enables young children to engage
in the narrative in a non-threatening way. Safety planning is an
essential component of direct work with children and the
accompanying professional guide provides up-to date information on
domestic abuse, childhood trauma, practice tips, and how to
complete a safety plan with a young child using the storybook as
the key vessel of communication and exploration. The trauma a young
child may experience from domestic abuse can impact their entire
developing system, making them feel worried, frightened, and
unsafe. This set is a crucial tool for the early years sector,
education staff and those working in children’s services,
including safeguarding officers, family support workers, early help
workers, social workers and children’s IDVAs.
This guidebook is an essential companion to the Pilgrim’s Bumpy
Flight story and is designed to be read by professionals to ensure
the effective and safe use of the storybook. Pilgrims Bumpy Flight
has been created to help young children aged 5- 7 experiencing
domestic abuse, to explore the concepts of physical and emotional
safety. Safety planning with a child offers a way to help them
vocalise their feelings and understand what to do when something
does not feel right. The professional guide will help supporting
adults facilitate safety planning that is experienced as
emphatically curious, safe and where the child’s opinion matters.
It provides up-to date information on domestic abuse, childhood
trauma, practice tips, and how to complete a safety plan with a
young child using the storybook as the key vessel of communication
and exploration. Key features include: - Accessible information
about domestic abuse and coercive control based on the latest
research - Guidance around direct work and safety planning with
young children - Practical activities building off Pilgrim’s
story, including printable material - Things to consider and ways
to use the storybook to facilitate conversation with a child, as
well as page-by-page helper’s notes on the narrative - A
comprehensive list of helplines and organisations in place to
support adult victim/survivors of domestic abuse Used alongside the
storybook, this professional guide is a crucial tool for the early
years sector, education staff and those working in children’s
services, including safeguarding officers, family support workers,
social workers and children’s IDVAs. Both books should be used in
tandem with agency policy, procedure and guidance.
Combined set of Draw on Your Emotions and The Emotions Cards. Draw
on Your Emotions is a bestselling resource to help people of all
ages express, communicate and deal more effectively with their
emotions through drawing. Built around five key themes, each
section contains a simple picture exercise with clear objectives,
instructions and suggestions for development. The picture
activities have been carefully designed to help ease the process of
both talking about feelings and exploring life choices, by trying
out alternatives safely on paper. This will help to create clarity
and new perspectives as a step towards positive action. The second
edition of Draw on Your Emotions contains a new section that
explains how to get the most out of combining the activities in the
book with these cards to encourage meaningful conversations and
take steps towards positive action. The Emotion Cards are 48
emotive and artistic images designed to help people to review their
emotions and their relationships in a meaningful and often
transformative way. The cards are designed to capture the deeper
truth of how people experience their life, offering poignant
descriptions for what someone may be feeling.
This guidebook is designed to support professionals with the
effective use of the storybook, Luna Little Legs, which has been
created help preschool aged children understand about domestic
abuse and coercive control. Sensitively and accessibly written, the
guidebook presents the adult with comprehensive information
regarding domestic abuse and coercive control, and its impact on
young children, putting them in a position to have important and
informed interactions with the young children in their care. These
conversations help children to make sense of their experiences of
domestic abuse, giving them the opportunity to vocalise their
feelings and to understand what to do when something is not right.
Key features of this book include: Page-by-page notes to support
the sensitive reading of the Luna Little Legs story Accessible
information about domestic abuse and coercive control based on the
latest research A comprehensive list of helplines and organisations
in place to support adult victims of domestic abuse. This is an
essential companion to the Luna Little Legs story, and is crucial
reading for anybody working with young children and their families
who are experiencing, or have experienced, domestic abuse and
coercive control.
This book is designed to support professionals with the sensitive
and effective use of the storybook, Floss and the Boss, created to
help young children understand about domestic abuse and coercive
control. By defining domestic abuse and coercive control and
exploring the effects upon children and their education, this
guidebook puts the professional in a position to have important
conversations with children about what to do if something at home
does not feel right. When used with the storybook, it provides a
vehicle for talking to children about staying safe and their
emotional wellbeing. Key features of this book include:
Page-by-page notes, with discussion topics and points for
conversation around the Floss and the Boss story Activities for
supporting children, safety planning strategies and guidance for
taking on a key adult role A comprehensive list of helplines and
organisations in place to support adult victims of domestic abuse
This is a vital tool for teachers, social care staff, therapists
and other professionals working with the Floss and the Boss story
to teach young children about domestic abuse and coercive control.
Now in a fully updated second edition, this professional guidebook
has been created to help adults provide emotional support for
children who have experienced the loss of somebody they know, or
something they loved. Written in an accessible style and with a
sensitive tone, Helping Children with Loss provides adults with a
rich vocabulary for mental states and painful emotions, paving the
way for meaningful and healing conversations with children who are
struggling with difficult feelings. Practical activities provide
opportunities for conversation and will empower the child to find
creative and imaginative ways of expressing themselves when words
fail. Key features of this resource include: Targeted advice for
children who defend against feeling their painful feelings by
dissociating from grief Tools and strategies for helping children
cope with loss, including engaging activities to help children
explore their feelings in a non-threatening way Photocopiable and
downloadable resources to help facilitate support Written by a
leading child psychotherapist with over thirty years' experience,
this book will support children to develop emotional literacy and
connect with unresolved feelings affecting their behaviour. It is
an essential resource for anybody supporting children aged 4-12 who
have experienced loss.
This beautifully illustrated and sensitively written storybook and
accompanying professional guide have been created to help young
children understand about domestic abuse and coercive control.
Floss is a happy little puppy who loves going to Doggy Daycare and
playing with her best friend, Houdini. The story explores how
things change when her Mum's new friend, Boss, comes into their
lives. Floss's story supports children who have experienced
domestic abuse and trauma as they make sense of their feelings,
teaching them to seek help and stay safe. The supporting guidebook
helps adults to work through the story effectively, putting the
professional in a position to have important conversations with
children about what to do if something at home does not feel right.
This set: Can be used to address the topic of domestic abuse and
coercive control with individuals, small groups and whole classes,
enabling dialogue around a sensitive issue Offers activities for
supporting children, safety planning strategies and guidance for
taking on a key adult role Can be used to support the PSHE
curriculum, particularly around the topic of healthy relationships
This set is a vital tool for teachers, social care staff,
therapists and other professionals working to teach young children
about domestic abuse and coercive control. It provides an important
vehicle for talking to children about staying safe and their
emotional wellbeing.
For effective and safe use, this book should be purchased alongside
the professional guidebook. Both books can be purchased together as
a set, Helping Young Children Learn About Domestic Abuse and
Coercive Control: A Luna Little Legs Storybook and Professional
Guide [9781032072555] This sensitively written storybook has been
created to help very young children understand about domestic abuse
and coercive control. Luna loves playing with her friends at kitten
club, but at home things are different. One terrible night, Luna
overhears a domestic abuse incident and, when her own name is
mentioned, she wonders if it might be her fault. Accompanied by
beautiful and engaging illustrations, the story provides a vehicle
for talking with children about their experiences, safety and
emotional wellbeing. Three potential endings allow the story to be
personalised to the individual child: * In ending 1, Luna is
comforted by her mummy and remains at home * In ending 2, Luna and
her mummy move to a refuge, and eventually into their own home * In
ending 3, Luna's daddy apologises for his behaviour promising to
change , and she and her mummy move back into the family home
Through age-appropriate rhyming language, this story explores
children's common reactions to domestic abuse, shows them that they
are not alone, and helps them talk about their feelings. It is an
essential tool for all early years practitioners, as well as
professionals working with children and families who are
experiencing, or have experienced, domestic abuse and coercive
control.
For effective and safe use, this book should be purchased alongside
the professional guidebook. Both books can be purchased together as
a set, Domestic Abuse Safety Planning with Young Children: A
'Pilgrim’s Bumpy Flight' Storybook and Professional Guide
[9781032357997] Pilgrim is a little plane who loves flying through
the sky and zooming through big hoops with their friends. At home,
however, Pilgrim experiences frightening behaviour from Jumbo, who
represents the perpetrating parent, that makes them feel scared and
sad. Pilgrim is comforted and guided by Jet, who represents the
victim/survivor parent, to think about safety and what to do when
frightening things are happening. The trauma a young child may
experience from domestic abuse can impact their entire developing
system, making them feel worried, frightened, and unsafe. Safety
planning is an essential component of direct work with children,
offering a way to help them vocalise their feelings and understand
what to do when something does not feel right, and this storybook
is a key vessel for communication and exploration. The story, which
is rhyming and engaging, enables young children to engage in the
narrative in a non-threatening way. This book aims to be accessible
to all children from all families where safety planning is needed
as such the characters in it are non-gendered. This beautifully
illustrated storybook is a crucial tool for the early years sector,
education staff and those working in children’s services,
including safeguarding officers, family support workers, social
workers and children’s IDVAs. This book is designed to be used
alongside the companion guidebook, Domestic Abuse Safety Planning
with Young Children: A Professional Guide. Both books should be
used in tandem with agency policy, procedure and guidance.
This book is designed to enable practitioners to help children
whose emotional wellbeing is being adversely affected by troubled
parents. These are children who live with the burden of having to
navigate their parent's troubled emotional states, often leaving
them with a mass of painful feelings about a chaotic and disturbing
world. They can feel alarmed by their parent rather than
experiencing them as 'home', and a place of safety and solace. The
author explores the fact that when parents are preoccupied with
their own troubles, they are often unable to effectively address
their child's core relational needs, e.g. soothing, validating,
attunement, co-adventure, interactive play. As a result, children
are left self-helping, which all too often means drugs, drink,
self-harm, depression, anxiety, eating disorders or problems with
anger in the teenage years. This guidebook offers readers a wealth
of vital theory and effective interventions for working with these
children and, specifically, the key feelings such children need
help with. Particular focus is given to the effects on children of:
family breakdown, separation and divorce, witnessing parents
fighting, and parents who suffer from depression or anxiety, mental
or physical ill-health, alcohol or drug addiction. Readers will
learn: the complexity of children's feelings about their troubled
parents how to enable children to address their unspoken hurt,
fear, grief, rage, and resentment about their troubled parent in
order to move forward in their lives how to empower children to
find their voice when they have been left in the role of impotent
bystander effective parent-child intervention when parental
troubles are adversely affecting the child and how to help a parent
and child 'find' each other again.
Eric is a sand dragon who loves the sea very much. Each day, he
watches it go out, knowing that it will return. But one day, Eric
waits and waits, but it does not come back. He falls on the sand,
feeling as if he has lost everything. Eric wants to shut himself
off from his feelings, but eventually spots a little wildflower
growing, and another, and another. He builds a rock pool garden, in
memory of the sea that he loves, and learns that it is much better
to feel the full pain of his loss, instead of closing his heart.
The Day the Sea Went Out and Never Came Back is a story for
children who have lost someone they love. The beautiful
illustrations and sensitively written story offer a wealth of
opportunities to begin a conversation about the difficult emotions
that can follow a loss, helping children to acknowledge and express
their emotions. The story shows them that it is brave to feel sad,
that they are surrounded by support, and that memories of a loved
one are a special treasure that can never be lost.Ideal for
starting conversations about grief and sadness, this is an
essential resource for anybody supporting children aged 4-12 who
have experienced loss.
This is a story for children who are anxious or obsessional. Willy
is an anxious boy who experiences the world as a very unsafe,
wobbly place where anything awful might happen at any time. Joe,
the boy next door, is too ordered and tidy to be able to ever
really enjoy life. Follow their adventures with the Puddle People
who help them break out of their fixed patterns and find far richer
ways of living in the world.
For effective and safe use, this book should be purchased alongside
the professional guidebook. Both books can be purchased together as
a set, Helping Children Learn About Domestic Abuse and Coercive
Control: A Floss and the Boss Storybook and Professional Guide
[9780367344511] This beautifully illustrated and sensitively
written storybook has been created to help young children
understand about domestic abuse and coercive control. Floss is a
happy little puppy who loves going to Doggy Daycare and playing
with her best friend, Houdini. The story explores how things change
when her Mum's new friend, Boss, comes into their lives. It helps
children who have experienced domestic abuse and trauma to make
sense of their feelings, teaching them to seek help and stay safe.
This book: Can be used to support the 'Healthy Relationships' topic
in the PSHE curriculum Can be used to address the topic of domestic
abuse and coercive control with individuals, small groups and whole
classes, enabling dialogue around a sensitive issue Encourages
children to seek support Designed to be used with primary-aged
children, this book provides a vehicle for talking to children
about staying safe and their emotional wellbeing. It is also
available to purchase as part of a set with a professional guide to
support the sensitive and effective use of the storybook.
Draw on Your Relationships is a bestselling resource to help people
of all ages express, communicate and deal more effectively with
their emotions through drawing. Built around five key themes, each
section contains a simple picture exercise with clear objectives,
instructions and suggestions for development. The picture
activities have been carefully designed to help ease the process of
both talking about feelings and exploring life choices, by trying
out alternatives safely on paper. This will help to create clarity
and new perspectives as a step towards positive action. Offering a
broad range of exercises which can be adapted for any ability or
age from middle childhood onwards, this unique book explores a
range of emotions surrounding a person's important life
experiences, key memories, relationships, best times, worst times
and who they are as a person. This is an essential resource for
therapists, educators, counsellors and anyone who engages other
people in conversations that matter about their relationship to
self, others and life in general. This revised and updated second
edition also contains a new section on how to use the superbly
emotive The Relationship Cards (ISBN 9781138071018) to facilitate
deeper therapeutic conversations.
The Frog Who Longed for the Moon to Smile is a story for children
who yearn for someone they love. Frog is very much in love with the
moon because she once smiled at him. So now he spends all his time
dreaming about her. He waits and waits for her to smile at him
again. One day a wise and friendly crow helps frog to see how he is
wasting his life away. All the time he has been facing the place of
very little, he's had his back to the place of plenty.
This beautifully illustrated and sensitively written storybook and
professional guide set has been created to help preschool children
understand about domestic abuse and coercive control. Luna Little
Legs: Luna loves playing with her friends at kitten club, but at
home things are different. One terrible night, Luna overhears a
domestic abuse incident and, when her own name is mentioned, she
wonders if it might be her fault. With a comforting rhyming
structure and age-appropriate tone, three alternative endings allow
the story to be personalised to the experiences of the individual
child. Helping Young Children Understand About Domestic Abuse and
Coercive Control: This supporting guidebook presents professionals
with comprehensive information regarding domestic abuse and
coercive control and its impact on young children. With
page-by-page notes to support the reading of the story and
practical activities to help broach the topic in a non-threatening
way, it puts the adult in a position to have important and informed
interactions with young children. Broaching a challenging topic in
a sensitive way, this is an essential tool for early years
practitioners, as well as professionals working with children and
families who are experiencing, or have experienced, domestic abuse
and coercive control.
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The Emotion Cards (Cards)
Margot Sunderland, Nicky Armstrong
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R1,442
R835
Discovery Miles 8 350
Save R607 (42%)
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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The Emotion Cards are 48 emotive and artistic images designed to
help people to review their emotions and their relationships in a
meaningful and often transformative way. The cards are designed to
capture the deeper truth of how people experience their life,
offering poignant descriptions for what someone may be feeling.
This beautiful resource is also a perfect supplement to Draw on
Your Emotions, Margot Sunderland(1)s bestselling book. The second
edition of Draw on Your Emotions contains a new section that
explains how to get the most out of combining the activities in the
book with these cards to encourage meaningful conversations and
take steps towards positive action. Intended for use in educational
settings and/or therapy contexts under the supervision of an adult.
This is not a toy.
Draw on Your Emotions is a bestselling resource to help people of
all ages express, communicate and deal more effectively with their
emotions through drawing. Built around five key themes, each
section contains a simple picture exercise with clear objectives,
instructions and suggestions for development. The picture
activities have been carefully designed to help ease the process of
both talking about feelings and exploring life choices, by trying
out alternatives safely on paper. This will help to create clarity
and new perspectives as a step towards positive action. Offering a
broad range of exercises which can be adapted for any ability or
age from middle childhood onwards, this unique book explores a
range of emotions surrounding a person(1)s important life
experiences, key memories, relationships, best times, worst times
and who they are as a person. This is an essential resource for
therapists, educators, counsellors and anyone who engages other
people in conversations that matter about their relationship to
self, others and life in general. This revised and updated second
edition also contains a new section on how to use the superbly
emotive The Emotion Cards (9781138070981) to facilitate deeper
therapeutic conversations.
Now in its second edition, this practical guidebook and beautifully
illustrated storybook have been created to help teachers and
professionals support children aged 4-12 who have experienced loss.
Written in an accessible style and with a sensitive tone, Helping
Children with Loss provides adults with a rich vocabulary for
mental states and painful emotions, paving the way for meaningful
and healing conversations with children who are struggling with
difficult feelings. Practical activities provide opportunities for
conversation and will empower the child to find creative and
imaginative ways of expressing themselves when words fail. The Day
the Sea Went Out and Never Came Back is a story for children who
have lost someone they love. The beautiful illustrations and
compassionate story offer a wealth of opportunities to begin a
conversation about the difficult emotions that can follow a loss,
helping children to acknowledge and express their emotions. The
story shows them that it is brave to feel sad, that they are
surrounded by support, and that memories of a loved one are a
special treasure that can never be lost.
This is a guidebook to help children who: don't like themselves or
feel there is something fundamentally wrong with them have been
deeply shamed have received too much criticism or haven't been
encouraged enough let people treat them badly because they feel
they don't deserve better do not accept praise or appreciation
because they feel they don't deserve it feel defeated by life,
fundamentally unimportant, unwanted or unlovable bully because they
think they are worthless or think they are worthless because they
are bullied and feel they don't belong or do not seek friends
because they think no-one would want to be their friend.
This is a story for children with troubled parents. Monica has a
horrid problem. It gets everywhere: into her schoolwork, her
dreams, and her ability to make friends. People keep telling her to
cheer up. She can't. She feels as if she is carrying around some
very heavy luggage. Then one day, a helpful teacher sees how
miserable Monica is, and tells her about the knights in the world,
who are posing as people. In a whispering wood, Monica finds some
of these knights. They teach her how to make her problem far less
horrid. In particular they show her how to cope when other people's
problems weigh you down and make you feel miserable. Most
importantly they show her how to do life well. Monica leaves
whispering wood feeling empowered and ready to face what she could
not face before.
The Relationship Cards are 48 emotive and artistic images designed
to help people to review the key relationships in their lives in a
meaningful and often transformative way. The cards provide an
engaging way for people to talk about and clarify their feelings,
while reflecting on what they value in their relationships and what
they might want to change. Spanning both positive and negative
states in relationships, the cards show themes such as trust,
resentment, fear of abandonment, drifting apart, encouragement and
feeling supported. The accompanying booklet explains how to use the
cards with participants in a supportive and safe way to facilitate
deeper conversations about relationships with people in their
lives, past and present. Accompanying translations are provided in
German, French, Swedish, Dutch, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese and
Japanese. This beautiful resource can be used by educators,
therapists or anyone wishing to open a dialogue about
relationships. It is also a perfect supplement to Draw on Your
Relationships, Margot Sunderland's bestselling book. The second
edition of Draw on Your Relationships contains a new section that
explains how to get the most out of combining the activities in the
book with these cards to encourage meaningful conversations and
take steps towards positive action. Intended for use in educational
settings and/or therapy contexts under the supervision of an adult.
This is not a toy.
Combined set of Draw on Your Relationships and The Relationship
Cards. Draw on Your Relationships is a bestselling resource to help
people of all ages express, communicate and deal more effectively
with their emotions through drawing. Built around five key themes,
each section contains a simple picture exercise with clear
objectives, instructions and suggestions for development. The
picture activities have been carefully designed to help ease the
process of both talking about feelings and exploring life choices,
by trying out alternatives safely on paper. This will help to
create clarity and new perspectives as a step towards positive
action.This revised and updated second edition also contains a new
section on how to use the superbly emotive The Relationship Cards
(ISBN 9781138071018) to facilitate deeper therapeutic
conversations. The Relationship Cards are 48 emotive and artistic
images designed to help people to review the key relationships in
their lives in a meaningful and often transformative way. The cards
provide an engaging way for people to talk about and clarify their
feelings, while reflecting on what they value in their
relationships and what they might want to change.
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