Additional Information
Book Details
Abstract
This convenient collection of handouts provides a wide range of ready-made activities for all kinds of therapists working on a professional level with child and adolescent clients and their families.
There are activities in this book suitable for any therapist, whether trained as a counsellor, psychologist, social worker, family or child therapist, psychiatrist or psychotherapist. The handouts provide creative approaches to a variety of presenting problems, including anxiety, anger, depression and family issues, and the age-range appropriate to each activity is indicated on the handouts. Fully photocopiable, the tools can be used to complement or expand upon a young client's treatment plan by selecting the activities that will help them best to meet their therapeutic goals.
This practical set of therapy tools will be invaluable in saving time for the busy therapist. There is also a companion volume, Therapy To Go: Gourmet Fast Food Handouts for Working with Adult Clients.
The book provides creative ways to explore a wide-range of general therapeutic issues and specific problems... The best feature of this book is that it contains such a vast range of photocopiable resources in a single place. The topics covered are so wide-ranging that it would take a busy therapist a considerable time to develop a similar set of resources of their own.
Behavioural & Cognitive Psychotherapy
Clare Rosoman is a clinical psychologist currently managing a large not-for-profit psychology clinic in Queensland, Australia. She is also a consultant at Griffith University as a supervisor of post-graduate clinical psychology students in their work with clients. Dr Rosoman has previously worked in a variety of settings including psychiatric hospitals, private practice, schools and universities, and has published several papers in the area of children's social functioning and antisocial behaviour.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
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1. Introduction: development and young feminisms | |||
2. Reclaim, resist, reframe: re-imagining feminist movements in the 2010s | |||
3. Repoliticising women’s rights in development: young African feminisms at the cutting edge | |||
4. Young feminists’ creative strategies to challenge the status quo: a view from FRIDA | |||
5. In the land of wise old men: experiences of young women activists in Myanmar | |||
6. Reading girls’ participation in Girl Up as feminist: club members’ activism in the UK, USA and Malawi | |||
7. Young feminists working globally to end violence against women and girls: key challenges and ways forward | |||
8. Reclaiming culture, resisting co-optation: young feminists confronting the rising right | |||
9. A young feminist new order: an exploration of why young feminists organise the way they do | |||
10. ‘Paid work: the magic solution for young women to achieve empowerment? Evidence from the Empower Youth for Work project in Bangladesh | |||
11. Empowering youth in rural, up-country Sri Lanka through gender equitable education and employment | |||
12. Resources |