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Developing the basic principles of her model of playtherapy, Sue
Jennings has written a stimulating book that will provide
inspiration for those new to the discipline, whilst providing a
fresh and exciting approach for established practitioners. In
Introduction to Developmental Playtherapy, Jennings argues that
creative play is essential for children's health. Drawing on
examples from her own professional experience, she discusses how
play can help resolve issues by allowing possible solutions to be
explored safely, thus encouraging flexibility of response. She
explores the cultural background and theory of using play as a
therapeutic tool with children and how play can communicate to the
therapist what the child needs to tell. Innovative and accessible,
her book breaks fertile new ground for playtherapy.
In this text, Mooli Lahad argues that the most effective method of
supervision uses both right and left hemispheres of the brain, the
intuitive and logical. He proposes that metaphors, images and
stories can be used to enrich theoretical knowledge and improve our
understanding of the processes of therapy and support.;Lahad
introduces techniques which can be employed during a supervision to
release information from the creative hemisphere of the brain.
These include storytelling, role-playing, guided fantasy, imaginary
dialogues, letter-writing, drawing and the use of colours and
shapes.;Case examples show how the techniques were used, and how
they provided insight into problematic relationships with clients.
Drawing from his experiences of working in the aftermath of tragedy
in Israel, Northern Ireland and the former Yugoslavia, Lahad
examines how to supervise a crisis intervention team, also focusing
on self-supervision.
Breaking new ground in the areas of attachment and child
development, Sue Jennings introduces the concept of
'Neuro-Dramatic-Play' exploring the sensory experiences that take
place between mother and child during pregnancy and the first few
months after birth. She explains how this interaction, that is
essentially 'dramatic' in nature, is of crucial importance for the
infant to develop a healthy brain, strong attachments and future
resilience. Based on sound experience and observation, this book
consolidates current theories of neuroscience, attachment and
therapeutic intervention and challenges commonly held
psychoanalytic ideas of child development. By expanding on the
often narrow view of what is understood by attachment, this book
makes a strong case for early years inclusion of play and arts
therapies. Neuro-Dramatic-Play is also discussed in relation to
fostering and adoption, teenagers and young adults, and children
with developmental or cognitive disabilities. This accessible text
will interest all therapists and practitioners who work with
children and teenagers, including child psychotherapists,
psychologists, social workers, paediatric and perinatal nurses,
paediatricians, child psychiatrists and play and arts therapists,
and post-graduate students.
The "BASIC Ph" model of coping and resiliency, developed by Prof.
Mooli Lahad and Dr. Ofra Ayalon, was the first to describe coping
as an on-going effort to manage life challenges. This is the first
book to be published on this world-renowned approach, widely used
as an effective resiliency assessment, intervention, and recovery
model. Underpinning the model is the suggestion that every person
has internal powers, or coping resources, which can be mobilized in
stressful situations; the effort to survive coming from a healthy
rather than a pathological instinct. The categorization of these
coping resources gives the model its name: Belief, Affect, Social,
Imagination, Cognition, Physical. This edited volume outlines the
theory behind the "BASIC Ph" approach, presents practice-based and
research-based interventions and explains their application during
and in the wake of both natural and man-made disasters. With
wide-ranging chapters from authoritative contributors, the book
shows how the "BASIC Ph" model can be successfully applied in
family, community, education, health, and business settings. This
will be an invaluable text for professionals, academics, and
students with an interest in trauma and coping with crisis and
disaster.
Highlighting the importance of a 'safe place' as the foundation of
the healing process for those affected by child sexual abuse, this
practical book details the factors that contribute to a secure
therapeutic climate where recovery can take place. The Children and
Families Project draws on the perspectives of those who have been
abused to show how a person-centred approach to establishing a
sense of safety can enable children and their relatives to regain
trust and self-esteem. The book demonstrates how therapeutic
services can be improved through feedback from service users and
how creative activities such as storytelling, painting and drama
can encourage the expression of experiences. The need for
preventative work is also addressed. Of particular relevance to
professionals is the exploration of some of the difficulties that
may be encountered in this field of work, such as the tension that
can arise between therapeutic work and the child protection system.
This is an invaluable resource for anyone working with abused
children and adults.
Supervisors who wish to employ a more imaginative approach to their
work will find concepts such as 'aesthetic distancing' and
techniques derived from dramatherapy - the use of myths and
stories, dramatic play and roles - particularly useful. Supervision
and Dramatherapy explores the ways in which dramatherapy techniques
and concepts can be applied to supervision, and looks at how
supervisions are conducted within the field of dramatherapy. The
contributors, leading dramatherapists from Britain, Continental
Europe, the United States and Israel, have written on the
historical background of supervion in dramatherapy, the process of
dramatherapy supervision, the training of
supervisor-dramatherapists, taking a dramatherapy approach to
business supervisions, the supervision of crisis intervention teams
and dramatherapy research. They offer insights into the
relationships between supervisor, supervisee and client, and the
dramatic roles that unfold during the supervision process. Drawing
on their own experiences in clinical and non-clinical settings, and
richly illustrating their accounts with examples from practice,
they offer exciting and creative ways of effectively supervising
dramatherapists and non-dramatherapists alike.
Nature Therapy is an innovative approach for working with children
who have experienced stress or trauma. For the first time in the
English language, this book presents the theory behind the approach
along with detailed guidelines for introducing it to the classroom
and other group settings The flexible 12-session programme pairs
nature-based activities with storytelling and other expressive arts
approaches. It is designed to strengthen coping and resilience in
children who have been through common causes of stress such as the
divorce of parents, moving home, the illness of a loved one or
bullying. It can also be used in the aftermath of large-scale
crises such as war, terrorism and natural disasters to prevent and
treat post-traumatic stress disorder. An evocative colour
storybook, 'The Guardians of the Forest', is also included for use
within the programme. The original, evidence-based approach
described in this book will be of interest to all those working
therapeutically or creatively with children who have experienced
stress or trauma, including teachers, arts therapists,
psychologists and counsellors.
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