Teachers: Here Are The Answers To Your Questions About Students
Who Struggle And Have Challenges
80% of teacher training tends to be on content, with only about
20% of training focusing on the "human factors," those
minute-to-minute problems with your youngsters that dominate
each day. Whether you are a teacher, counselor, social worker or
psychologist, there are days that you run out of answers.
Here is your chance to get the answers you need for your most
challenging youth problems. Eavesdrop on the questions posed in
our Live Expert Help area of our web site, and perhaps your
question will be answered. Have a question for Live Help? Click
on the Live Help icon at our site, http://www.youthchg.com. Q: Do
you have any ideas how to get young children to show up at our
site when no parent seems willing to assist the child to attend?
A: We believe in the ends justify the means in this area,
meaning that unless it violates your site's rules or policies,
then do it if it will help the child to attend. Your service is
just that important, that you should do whatever it takes to get
the child in. Actions can include waking the child by phone,
picking up the child in the morning, or securing an alarm clock
for the youngster to use. You can also use our popular
"Countdown to School (or Agency) Schedule" or make a facsimile
of it. The "Countdown to School Schedule" lists times for the
child to perform the actions needed to get ready for school. It
compensates a bit for the lack of vital family supervision.
BONUS INTERVENTION: If you work with young children, you know
that many can't tell time and may not reliably know numbers, so
put a piece of tape under the place where the numbers will click
in on a digital clock. On the tape, write the time you want the
child to get up. So, you might put a "7" on the tape, and teach
the child to get up and go when the number on the clock matches
the number on the tape. It is sad to have you taking over the
family's job, but if you have been unable to engage the family,
this may be an option worth considering.
BONUS INTERVENTION: For very young children, just teach them to
"get up and go," and wait a bit before adding in other less
crucial tasks like washing the face, for example. Once the child
masters the basics, you can add on more tasks. In the meantime,
you may want to have a few snacks, some sweatshirts, etc. to
fill in the gaps. Whether an older youth, a younger child, a
cold or hungry kid will have difficulty benefitting from your
service. Be sure to also expose the child to plenty of
motivation-makers; there are a few on our site, and hundreds in
our books http://www.youthchg.com/
school.html. A child who believes that your service is
incredibly important, may work harder to arrive.
Q: I am so frustrated trying to get some parents to do their
job! What ideas do you have to get parents to do what they are
supposed to do?
A: By the time you run into a troubled family, the problems have
been in that system for a long time. We actually do not
recommend that people who are not family therapists continue to
spend large amounts of time working to engage parents who never
seem to improve. If you are a teacher with 30 in your classroom,
or a school counselor with a caseload of 500, for example, it is
not realistic that in your brief seconds of "spare time," you
somehow magically turnaround deeply troubled families. In your
spare time, you probably will not be able to get that mom to
finally stop drinking, or that dad to suddenly recognize the
importance of your service. Instead, we recommend that you
discontinue or reduce your repeatedly unsuccessful efforts with
the adults, and devote all or most of your energy to helping the
child succeed without family support. The ideas shown above, on
helping even young children attend your site without family aid,
are an example of what we mean. Yes, this is tragic, but you can
still succeed with the child even though you may never succeed
with the parents. The child is your real target, and where the
best hope for success may lie.
Q: We are seeing more and more kids who are incredibly mean and
violent, and it seems like absolutely nothing I do makes them
behave. What can I do that would work better?
A: This is one of the most frequent questions we get. 11-15% of
your population are conduct disorders. That is a mental health
term that a mental health professional can apply to some
extremely hurtful kids. The way you work with conduct disorders,
and kids you believe might be conduct disorders, differs
dramatically from conventional approaches. Conventional
approaches will consistently fail with this portion of your
kids. You have to use a different set of tools, or else you will
continue to feel that virtually nothing you do yields any useful
results. We have a good resource for you on this. Go to our
site, http://www.youthchg.co
m/hottopic.html, where some of the basics on conduct
disorders are spelled out. If you need it, our "All the Best
Answers for the Worst Problems: Conduct Disorders and
Anti-Social Youth" books can give you more than the introductory
information in the article. Q: Can you explain to me what
Aspergers is? And, what should I do?
A: Aspergers is a constellation of symptoms that varies from
child to child. It may be related to autism, and is not fully
understood. Only a counselor or medical professional can
diagnose it. Some common symptoms are inappropriate social
behaviors, distractibility, developmental delays, and repetitive
talk or actions. It's more common in males. Unlike autistic
children, language and cognitive functioning may not be as
significantly delayed or impaired. Also, this disorder may be
identified later, or occur later than autism. It is often
misdiagnosed. We suggest that you not let the terminology
confuse you-- even though many professionals are understandably
confused by this diagnostic term. Instead, focus on the specific
problems you see in the individual child, then prioritize the
concerns and work on them systematically. We suggest you focus
on three areas at a time.
BONUS INTERVENTION: If you have developed good methods to work
with ADD-affected children, some of those methods will work well
with Aspergers- affected youth. For example: for problematic
verbal interactions, you can teach your ADD- or
Aspergers-affected child how to make Opening, Middle and Closing
Lines, as a way to give them essential everyday conversational
skills. Opening Lines initiate the conversation, Middle Lines
continue it, and Closing Lines terminate it.
WANT MORE ANSWERS TO YOUR WORST "KID PROBLEMS?" That's what we
are here for. Consider coming to a live Breakthrough Strategies
class (http://www.youthchg.com/li
ve.html), or order the course on DVD/video (http://www.youthchg.com/ta
pe.html). We're here to help youth professionals help
troubled youth.