The Collaborative Problem Solving Approach: Treatment for Explosive
Noncompliant Children and Adolescents
Friday,
February 11, 2005
With Ross Greene,
Ph.D.
Location:
Freeport - |
 |
Harraseeket
Inn
162 Main Street
Freeport, Maine |
Program
Description: Explosive/noncompliant children and adolescents
frequently exhibit severe behaviors - intense temper outbursts, noncompliance,
volatility, mood instability, verbal and physical aggression, and destruction
of property - that can make life extraordinarily challenging for themselves
and their parents, siblings, teachers, and classmates. Such youths may
be diagnosed with any of various psychiatric disorders including oppositional
defiant disorder (ODD), attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD),
Tourette's disorder, depression, bipolar disorder, nonverbal learning
disability, and Asperger's disorder. Regardless of diagnosis,however,
their behavior is poorly understood and difficult to change.
Dr. Ross
Greene and his colleagues at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston
have pioneered a practical approach - called the Collaborative Problem
Solving (CPS) Approach - to working with such youths at home and school.
This approach is described in Dr. Greene's highly acclaimed, best-selling
book, The Explosive Child. The book has been featured on the Oprah
Show, Dateline NBC, and Good Morning America.
In this workshop,
Dr. Greene will present, as an alternative to the traditional behavior
management model, an approach aimed at improving self-regulation, affective
modulation, collaborative problem solving, flexibility, frustration tolerance,
and decreasing adversarial adult-child interactions. This approach emphasizes
a proactive (rather than reactive) mind set and the matching of treatment
ingredients to the needs of the individual children and adults.
About
the Speaker: Ross Greene, Ph.D., is Director of Cognitive-Behavioral
Psychology at the Clinical & Research Program in Pediatric Psychopharmacology
at Massachusetts General Hospital, where he specializes in the treatment
and study of explosive/noncompliant children and adolescents and their
families.
He is also
Assistant Professor of Psychology in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard
Medical School. Dr. Greene is the author of the highly acclaimed book, The Explosive Child. He has also authored numerous articles, chapters
and scientific papers in behavioral assessment and social impairment in
children, school and home-based interventions for children with disruptive
behavior disorders, and student-teacher compatibility. He has conducted
hundreds of presentations in the U.S. and internationally. He and Dr.
Stuart Ablon provide 3 day advanced trainings in Massachusetts each summer.
In addition,
Dr. Greene has founded the CPS Institute, a nonprofit organization established
to fund research on explosive/noncompliant children and adolescents and
to fund services to underprivileged youths who might not have access to
quality mental health services.
Educational
Objectives: Participants will be able to describe the following:
- How different
explanations for interpretations of explosive/noncompliant behavior
can lead to dramatically different approaches to intervention
- Why compliance
does not come naturally to all children, and the disparate factors which
may contribute to the development of explosive/noncompliant behavior
- The importance
of matching treatment ingredients to the needs of individual children,
families and teachers
- A conceptual
and practical model of intervention - flowing from social learning theory
for dealing more effectively with explosive/noncompliant children at
home and school
- The necessity
of a multimodal, collaborative approach to intervention incorporating
medical psychological, education, and social components
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