Descripción del título
In this ninety-minute video, best-selling author Dr. Tina Payne Bryson (co-author with Dan Siegel of The Whole-Brain Child and No-Drama Discipline) discusses the primary ways she brings the brain into her work with the children, adolescents, and parents who visit her office each week. Focusing on both the latest research and clinical application, Dr. Bryson will explain how she helps her young clients better understand themselves and their own brains, thus helping them overcome anxiety and develop resilience within themselves. Using stories and case examples, Dr. Bryson explains ten simple, scientifically-grounded strategies that can help psychotherapists better understand the brains of the kids they work with, and communicate that understanding to parents and the children themselves so that kids can feel less anxious and more in control of their bodies and emotions. 10 Brain-Based Approaches for Children - Connection between body, brain, and emotions, and what produces feelings of nervousness and fear. Learn to recognize anxiety and other negative emotions as messages sent by the body and brain. Use strategies and effective responses that "work for your brain and body." Understand neural plasticity and how kids can affect their brains by understanding and responding to their anxiety. Describe the brain as an association machine, by understanding mental and neural associations, kids can more effectively respond to what they're feeling. Help kids understand that the brain's job is to get a need met, and recognize their anxiety as a signal that the brain needs some sort of shift. Demonstrate how nervous system arousal works, and how resilience is about remaining in the optimal window for well being and happiness. Show how discipline and learning are guided by nervous system arousal, and how we determine at what point anxiety impairs this process. Introduce kids to the role mindfulness plays in addressing fear and anxiety.Teach tools of the mind and tools of the body, which allow children to overcome anxiety and build skills that help them control their anxious emotions and make good and healthy decisions
Material Proyectable
material_proyectable Rebiun25957245 https://catalogo.rebiun.org/rebiun/record/Rebiun25957245 m|||||o||c|||||||| cr |n||||||||a vz |za|z| 170818s2015 wiu092 eo |o v|eng d CBUC 991000714373606712 CBUC 991010520426206709 VaAlASP eng rda VaAlASP 10 brain-based strategies : help children overcome anxiety and promote resilience presented by Tina Payne Bryson Eau Claire, WI PESI Inc. 2015 Eau Claire, WI Eau Claire, WI PESI Inc. 1 online resource (92 minutes) 1 online resource (92 minutes) 013134 Two-dimensional Moving Image tdi rdacontent video v rdamedia computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier data file rda Title from resource description page (viewed August 18, 2017) In this ninety-minute video, best-selling author Dr. Tina Payne Bryson (co-author with Dan Siegel of The Whole-Brain Child and No-Drama Discipline) discusses the primary ways she brings the brain into her work with the children, adolescents, and parents who visit her office each week. Focusing on both the latest research and clinical application, Dr. Bryson will explain how she helps her young clients better understand themselves and their own brains, thus helping them overcome anxiety and develop resilience within themselves. Using stories and case examples, Dr. Bryson explains ten simple, scientifically-grounded strategies that can help psychotherapists better understand the brains of the kids they work with, and communicate that understanding to parents and the children themselves so that kids can feel less anxious and more in control of their bodies and emotions. 10 Brain-Based Approaches for Children - Connection between body, brain, and emotions, and what produces feelings of nervousness and fear. Learn to recognize anxiety and other negative emotions as messages sent by the body and brain. Use strategies and effective responses that "work for your brain and body." Understand neural plasticity and how kids can affect their brains by understanding and responding to their anxiety. Describe the brain as an association machine, by understanding mental and neural associations, kids can more effectively respond to what they're feeling. Help kids understand that the brain's job is to get a need met, and recognize their anxiety as a signal that the brain needs some sort of shift. Demonstrate how nervous system arousal works, and how resilience is about remaining in the optimal window for well being and happiness. Show how discipline and learning are guided by nervous system arousal, and how we determine at what point anxiety impairs this process. Introduce kids to the role mindfulness plays in addressing fear and anxiety.Teach tools of the mind and tools of the body, which allow children to overcome anxiety and build skills that help them control their anxious emotions and make good and healthy decisions In English Child development Child psychology Anxiety in children Educational films. Filmed lectures.