Talking with Children and Young People about Death and Dying is a popular resource designed to help adults talk to bereaved children and young people. Mary Turner explains the various aspects and stages of bereavement and offers useful insights into the concerns of children experiencing grief or fac
Talking with Young Children About Adoption
β Scribed by Mary Watkins; Susan Fisher
- Publisher
- Yale University Press
- Year
- 2014
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 269
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Mary Watkins and Susan Fisher begin by discussing parental fantasies and concerns that interfere with talking about adoption with their children. They then review the often outdated and disheartening adoption research, showing how its results can be distorted by apprehension and bias. They next discuss how adoption conversation evolves between parents and young children, what the child at various developmental stages does and does not understand, what kinds of questions the young child has, and how these questions reflect more general developmental issues. The heart of the book consists of the stories from familiesβnuclear, single- parent, lesbian, and interracial families, families with adopted children only, families with both biological and adopted children, families that adopted a child after first foster-parenting. These stories make it clear how early sharing about adoption establishes a family atmosphere in which worries and concerns can freely arise and be addressed, allowing the fact of adoption to strengthen family understanding, honesty, and intimacy. An appendix lists by age the adoption comments, related questions, and play sequences of children.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction. From Telling to Sharing: Changes in Adoption Practice
Chapter 1. Adoption and the World of the Parent
Chapter 2. Adoption Research
Chapter 3. Adoption and the World of the Young Child
Chapter 4. Stories of Parents and Children Talking Together about Adoption
Afterword
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p>'I'm worried that my child is depressed and anxious.' <br>'I'm worried that my child has an eating disorder.' <br>'I'm worried about drugs.' <br> <br>Mental health difficulties affect about 1 in 10 children and young people, ranging from fears, phobias and panic attacks to obsessions, compulsions
Explains what adoption is, why a parent might put a child up for adoption, and what is special about being adopted.
Some children face traumatic or difficult events in their lives, and it's essential that they are helped to understand such events and given permission to talk. To do this, helping adults need to be equipped and confident to start these conversations. Conversation Starters for Direct Work with Child