Counseling the Defiant Child: A Basic Guide to Helping Troubled and Aggressive Youth

Author:   John B. Mordock ,  William Van Ornum
Publisher:   Jason Aronson Publishers
ISBN:  

9780765702609


Pages:   227
Publication Date:   01 January 2001
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Counseling the Defiant Child: A Basic Guide to Helping Troubled and Aggressive Youth


Overview

The defiant child presents a challenge to the therapist's patience as well as to his skill. To help clinicians grow in both, this skillfully written volume by Dr. John B. Mordock draws on more than twenty-five years of experience with troubled children and their families.

Full Product Details

Author:   John B. Mordock ,  William Van Ornum
Publisher:   Jason Aronson Publishers
Imprint:   Jason Aronson Publishers
Dimensions:   Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.535kg
ISBN:  

9780765702609


ISBN 10:   0765702606
Pages:   227
Publication Date:   01 January 2001
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Reviews

While recent psychological literature emphasizes family therapy, most counselors spend a great deal of their time counseling children alone. Mordock helps them to consider whether individual or family therapy is the best route for a particular child, and offers proven principles and methods for them to help troubled children in a variety of situations. He provides numerous counseling dialogues between an adult and a child, many of them interchanges with aggressive-defiant children, the most difficult to counsel. Adolescence Magazine Mordock uses his wealth of experience to produce a well-written, well-organized, and easy-to-read volume that focuses heavily on understanding and producing therapeutic verbal encounters with children. Contemporary Psychology John Mordock has written a book that will be helpful to parents, relatives, foster, and adoptive parents--those who will be in a position to refer a troubled child for counseling, and the many persons ranging from psychologists, school staff, nurses, child care agency workers, and others who, as part of their work, assist troubled children every day. -- William Van Ornum, Ph.D., Marist College


John Mordock has written a book that will be helpful to parents, relatives, foster, and adoptive parents those who will be in a position to refer a troubled child for counseling, and the many persons ranging from psychologists, school staff, nurses, child care agency workers, and others who, as part of their work, assist troubled children every day.--William Van Ornum, Ph.D.


While recent psychological literature emphasizes family therapy, most counselors spend a great deal of their time counseling children alone. Mordock helps them to consider whether individual or family therapy is the best route for a particular child, and offers proven principles and methods for them to help troubled children in a variety of situations. He provides numerous counseling dialogues between an adult and a child, many of them interchanges with aggressive-defiant children, the most difficult to counsel. Adolescence Magazine Mordock uses his wealth of experience to produce a well-written, well-organized, and easy-to-read volume that focuses heavily on understanding and producing therapeutic verbal encounters with children. Contemporary Psychology John Mordock has written a book that will be helpful to parents, relatives, foster, and adoptive parents--those who will be in a position to refer a troubled child for counseling, and the many persons ranging from psychologists, school staff, nurses, child care agency workers, and others who, as part of their work, assist troubled children every day. -- William Van Ornum, Ph.D.


While recent psychological literature emphasizes family therapy, most counselors spend a great deal of their time counseling children alone. Mordock helps them to consider whether individual or family therapy is the best route for a particular child, and offers proven principles and methods for them to help troubled children in a variety of situations. He provides numerous counseling dialogues between an adult and a child, many of them interchanges with aggressive-defiant children, the most difficult to counsel. * Adolescence Magazine * Mordock uses his wealth of experience to produce a well-written, well-organized, and easy-to-read volume that focuses heavily on understanding and producing therapeutic verbal encounters with children. * Contemporary Psychology * John Mordock has written a book that will be helpful to parents, relatives, foster, and adoptive parents-those who will be in a position to refer a troubled child for counseling, and the many persons ranging from psychologists, school staff, nurses, child care agency workers, and others who, as part of their work, assist troubled children every day. -- William Van Ornum, Ph.D., Marist College


Author Information

John B. Mordock, Ph.D., is a clinical child psychologist in independent practice. A Diplomate of the American Board of Professional Psychology, Dr. Mordock is co-author of Crisis Counseling with Children and Adolescents and six other books, as well as numerous professional publications.

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