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The latest news from Jessica Kingsley Publishers

  • Published: Aug 23rd, 2011
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VIDEO: A preview of children’s book ‘The Red Beast’ by Kay and Haitham Al-Ghani

Categories: Autism, Asperger’s syndrome & related conditions, Education, JKP news, Video

RedBeast still3

Last April, JKP celebrated World Autism Awareness Day 2011 at the V&A Museum of Childhood’s special autism event and exhibition.  The highlight of this special day was a reading of The Red Beast: Controlling Anger in Children with Asperger’s Syndrome by the author, Kay Al-Ghani, and illustrator, Haitham Al-Ghani. Haitham read the book to a crowd of children and[... read more]

  • Published: Aug 22nd, 2011
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A different way of thinking about foster care – An Interview with Dr Annabel Goodyer

Category: Social work & social care

Child-Centred Foster Care

“I would like to think that fostering will become less regulated, less “professional” and more like normal parenting. We need to select foster carers who can be “Good Enough” stable parents to children and young people who can sometimes be difficult and demanding. We need to trust them to get on with the task and offer support, back-up and additional services when and if they are needed”

  • Published: Aug 19th, 2011
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Art Therapy and Postmodernism – An Interview with Dr. Helene Burt

Categories: Arts therapies, Social work & social care

Art Therapy and Postmodernism

“This book comes at a time when world events indicate our need to see from the perspective of the other or others… Authors from different communities and cultures come together in this book to help us all stretch our ways of seeing and practicing. Art therapists are in a unique position to use our life-giving creative energies to create positive change in the world.”

  • Published: Aug 17th, 2011
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Recognizing and Helping the Neglected Child – An Interview with Brigid Daniel, Julie Taylor and Jane Scott

Categories: Counseling & psychotherapy, Education, Health care, Social work & social care

Recognizing and Helping the Neglected Child

“Social workers tended to focus on responses to referrals and may need help to look beyond that to an overall picture of the child’s development. Other professional groups (such as dentists or nursery nurses or teachers) are well-placed to pick up on signals that a child might be being neglected, but may need more help to recognise this, and to know how to respond. Further, mothers in particular can recognise when they are struggling. Practitioners should not be afraid to ask them how they feel their parenting is going.”

  • Published: Aug 12th, 2011
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Social Work Under Pressure – Fighting Monsters Blogger interviews JKP author Kate van Heugten

Category: Social work & social care

Kate van Heugten

“It is possible that social workers may be somewhat more prone to stress and burnout because their relationship with clients is so central to their work. Their work efforts revolve around empathy and understanding of service users’ situations and this can be draining. They may not have been assisted to know how to handle this inherent stress in their training, and they may not be aware that setting boundaries is critical to self-care.”

  • Published: Aug 10th, 2011
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Using analogies and metaphors to understand and help defeat a child’s eating disorder – An Interview with Ahmed Boachie and Karin Jasper

Categories: Counseling & psychotherapy, Health care, Parenting, Social work & social care

Dr Ahmed Boachie and Dr Karin Jasper

“The analogies and metaphors in our book help parents understand eating disorders in a way that allows them to ally themselves with treatment rather than with the eating disorder. Children who believe that others grasp their experience find it easier to open up. They feel understood, respected, appreciated, and supported, thus decreasing their guilt and improving their listening.”

  • Published: Aug 5th, 2011
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Looking beyond “bad” behaviour – Melanie Cross on the importance of recognising communication difficulties in young people

Categories: Education, Social work & social care

Melanie Cross

“Non-compliance might be due to not understanding what’s been asked and not knowing how to ask for clarification. What might be seen as a refusal to explain might be due to difficulties constructing coherent narratives. Conflict resolution and negotiation require high-level language skills and if these are lacking, then aggression can result. If adults do not recognise the underlying communication problems, the children and young people who experience them can be misunderstood and even misdiagnosed.”

  • Published: Aug 2nd, 2011
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Dramatherapy Approaches for People with Profound or Severe Multiple Disabilities – An Interview with Mary Booker

Categories: Arts therapies, Disability

Mary Booker

“I have so many memorable experiences of using Developmental Drama: Someone’s face full of laughter and sheer joy when their name is ‘drummed’ to a climax in the warm-up…The sudden, unexpected and totally right response to a new event in the story…A whole group of children with multi-sensory impairment huddled together, looking upwards in wonder at a new and bright ‘hole in the sky!’ It goes on and on. I am a very lucky person.”

JKP Authors Andrew Nelson and Cindy Schneider share Autism-Theatre Techniques with specialists from Hong Kong

Categories: Arts therapies, Autism, Asperger’s syndrome & related conditions, Education, JKP news

JKP authors Andrew Nelson and Cindy Schneider with autism specialists from Hong Kong.

By Andrew Nelson, author of Foundation Role Plays for Autism: Role Plays for Working with Individuals with Autism Spectrum Disorders, Parents, Peers, Teachers, and Other Professionals Fellow JKP author Cindy Schneider (Acting Antics: A Theatrical Approach to Teaching Social Understanding to Kids and Teens with Asperger Syndrome) and I have been colleagues and friends for over three[... read more]

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