Collaborative Problem Solving

www.livesinthebalance.org


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Subtitle: www.livesinthebalance.org
Summary: If you're new to Collaborative Problem Solving, this is a good place to start. If you're not new to the model, this is a good place to stay fresh on key concepts. The model sets forth two major tenets. First, social, emotional, and behavioral challenges in kids are best understood as the byproduct of lagging cognitive skills in the domains of flexibility/adaptability, frustration tolerance, and problem-solving (rather than as attention-seeking, manipulative, limit-testing, or a sign of poor motivation). In other words, challenging behavior is a form of developmental delay. Second, these challenges are best addressed by collaboratively resolving the problems that are setting the stage for challenging behavior (rather than through reward and punishment programs and intensive imposition of adult will). Organized by important tenets of the model (and in logical sequence from top to bottom), each topic area is explained by Dr. Greene (filmed at a presentation in Regina, Saskatchewan, in April, 2009). Why is Collaborative Problem Solving important? Because challenging kids are still very poorly understood and therefore treated in ways that are unhelpful and counterproductive...and that place them at risk for adverse long-term outcomes...and it doesn't have to be that way.
Author: Dr. Ross Greene; Category: Education; Explicit: No

Track Listing

/ 0:04:3204410051.78 MB
This is the most important theme of Collaborative Problem Solving: the belief that if kids could do well they would do well. In other words, if the kid had the skills to exhibit adaptive behavior, he wouldn't be exhibiting challenging behavior. That's because doing well is always preferable to not doing well.
Collaborative Problem Solving
keywords: Collaborative-Problem-Solving-challenging-noncompliant-disruptive-behavior-problems-oppositional-defiant-bipolar-explosive
/ 0:17:32044100116.23 MB
Your explanation for a kid's is challenging behavior has major implications for how you'll try to help. If you believe a kid is challenging because of lagging skills and unsolved problems, then rewarding and punishing may not be the ideal approach. Solving those problems and teaching those skills would make perfect sense.
Lagging Skills and Unsolved Problems
keywords: Collaborative-Problem-Solving-challenging-noncompliant-disruptive-behavior-problems-oppositional-defiant-bipolar-explosive
/ 0:05:5004410066.93 MB
The definition of good parenting, good teaching, and good treatment is being responsive to the hand you’ve been dealt. Notice, the definition isn’t “treating every kid exactly the same”.
Responding to Individual Kids Individually
keywords: Collaborative-Problem-Solving-challenging-noncompliant-disruptive-behavior-problems-oppositional-defiant-bipolar-explosive
/ 0:07:2604410085.52 MB
Challenging behavior occurs when the demands of the environment exceed a kid’s capacity to respond adaptively. In other words, it takes two to tango. But many popular explanations for challenging behavior place blame on the kid or his parents. Not Collaborative Problem Solving.
Maladaptive Responses
keywords: Collaborative-Problem-Solving-challenging-noncompliant-disruptive-behavior-problems-oppositional-defiant-bipolar-explosive
/ 0:13:5104410091.88 MB
There are three ways in which adults try to solve problems with kids: Plan A (which is unilateral problem solving), Plan C (dropping the problem completely), and Plan B (that's the one you want to get really good at).

keywords:
/ 0:24:13044100279.76 MB


keywords: Collaborative-Problem-Solving-challenging-noncompliant-disruptive-behavior-problems-oppositional-defiant-bipolar-explosive


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