This workbook is for you if you are a teacher tired of dealing with angry students. Practicing the anger-reducing techniques (ART) will help educators learn how to remain calm and in control to teach students how to handle their anger productively. Teachers will practice the following: How to support angry students When to encourage angry students to talk How to help students understand their anger When to help students problem-solve How to help students develop plans of success. When students need to practice their success plans How to prepare students for smooth transitions back into school events In writing When Hurting Turns to Anger: Helping Students, I knew that a workbook would help teachers cement the concepts more firmly in their minds. Additionally, a workbook would provide a method for practicing the concepts, making them easier to use in classrooms. This workbook is used individually or in a group of participants. It is used interactively with When Hurting Turns to Anger: Helping Students. Teachers will review corresponding book chapters for each workbook chapter to refresh their memories and use them as a guide. The workbook contains exercises to complete, providing practice and cementing the ACT skills in teachers' minds. Once completed, educators can keep the workbook handy to refresh or review specific skills.
If parents want to learn the anger-reducing techniques (ART) to help their kids deal with anger, this workbook will provide the practice. Parents will practice the following: 1. How to support angry kids 2. When to encourage angry kids to talk 3. How to help kids understand their personal anger 4. When to help kids problem-solve 5. How to help kids develop plans of success 6. When kids need to practice their success plans 7. How to prepare kids for smooth transitions back into family events In writing the When Hurting Turns to Anger: How Parents Can Help Their Kids book, I knew that a workbook would help parents cement the concepts more firmly in their minds. Additionally, a workbook would provide a method for practicing the concepts, making them easier to use in families. This workbook is used individually or in a group of participants. It is used interactively with the When Hurting Turns to Anger: How Parents Can Help Their Kids book. For each workbook chapter, parents will review the corresponding book chapter to refresh their memories and use it as a guide. The workbook contains exercises to complete, which will provide practice and reinforce the skill in parents' minds. Once completed, keep the workbook handy to refresh or review specific skills.
Warning: If you are a parent who believes your kids need to be punished or feel natural consequences to become respectful and control their angry misbehavior, this book is not for you. For the rest of us parents, who struggle daily with raising kids with anger challenges, When Hurting Turns to Anger: How Parents Can Help Their Kids is the book for you. Dr. Nick Long (Anstine Templeton's mentor) taught his graduate students that forewarned is forearmed. That is what using the anger reducing techniques (ART) shared in When Hurting Turns to Anger does for parents-it forearms them from becoming reactive to their kids' anger. What is ART? It is a seven-step process that helps kids talk about their anger and learn ways to handle strong emotions effectively before they reach the anger stage. The theory is kids can learn skills to handle their anger productively at home rather than becoming overwhelmed, losing control, and cycling into crises. Using anger-reducing techniques, parents learn to: control their own anger, look beyond their kids' inappropriate behaviors, calm out-of-control kids, get kids to talk about their problems, show kids how to create plans of success, show kids how to make amends for misbehavior, and hold kids accountable for following their success plans. Internalizing the anger-reducing techniques, kids learn that: kids have a right to feel respected within their family, kids may not be disrespectful (hurtful) to other family members, it's okay to feel angry, it's not okay to act out anger inappropriately, there are many ways to deal with anger productively, parents can help kids to problem-solve, it's a must to have a plan of success, kids must make amends for any hurt they have caused, and kids will be held responsible for following their success plans. In an easy-to-learn process, Dr. Anstine Templeton shows how to master anger that frees parents to teach kids self-control, how to use anger effectively to succeed, and ways to make amends.
A books for all parents who want to create a great atmosphere in the family, in which to communicate and educate their kids. Includes many examples of real situations. It has been translated into 20 languages. Vietnamese translation by Tran Thi Huong Lan. In Vietnamese. Distributed by Tsai Fong Books, Inc.
This workbook is for you if you are a teacher tired of dealing with angry students. Practicing the anger-reducing techniques (ART) will help educators learn how to remain calm and in control to teach students how to handle their anger productively. Teachers will practice the following: How to support angry students When to encourage angry students to talk How to help students understand their anger When to help students problem-solve How to help students develop plans of success. When students need to practice their success plans How to prepare students for smooth transitions back into school events In writing When Hurting Turns to Anger: Helping Students, I knew that a workbook would help teachers cement the concepts more firmly in their minds. Additionally, a workbook would provide a method for practicing the concepts, making them easier to use in classrooms. This workbook is used individually or in a group of participants. It is used interactively with When Hurting Turns to Anger: Helping Students. Teachers will review corresponding book chapters for each workbook chapter to refresh their memories and use them as a guide. The workbook contains exercises to complete, providing practice and cementing the ACT skills in teachers' minds. Once completed, educators can keep the workbook handy to refresh or review specific skills.
If parents want to learn the anger-reducing techniques (ART) to help their kids deal with anger, this workbook will provide the practice. Parents will practice the following: 1. How to support angry kids 2. When to encourage angry kids to talk 3. How to help kids understand their personal anger 4. When to help kids problem-solve 5. How to help kids develop plans of success 6. When kids need to practice their success plans 7. How to prepare kids for smooth transitions back into family events In writing the When Hurting Turns to Anger: How Parents Can Help Their Kids book, I knew that a workbook would help parents cement the concepts more firmly in their minds. Additionally, a workbook would provide a method for practicing the concepts, making them easier to use in families. This workbook is used individually or in a group of participants. It is used interactively with the When Hurting Turns to Anger: How Parents Can Help Their Kids book. For each workbook chapter, parents will review the corresponding book chapter to refresh their memories and use it as a guide. The workbook contains exercises to complete, which will provide practice and reinforce the skill in parents' minds. Once completed, keep the workbook handy to refresh or review specific skills.
Thank you for visiting our website. Would you like to provide feedback on how we could improve your experience?
This site does not use any third party cookies with one exception — it uses cookies from Google to deliver its services and to analyze traffic.Learn More.