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Social Work newsletter - July 2009. Go to the newsletter archive.

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JKP Social Work Newsletter
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Social Work Newsletter

Welcome to the Jessica Kingsley Publishers Social Work Newsletter. This monthly newsletter includes interviews and articles and opinion pieces from JKP authors as well as relevant news stories and conference dates. We welcome your feedback and please do let us know of any forthcoming conferences or events that you would like us to mention.

You can find details on how to contribute or give feedback, as well as opt out of these emails, further down the newsletter.


Exclusive Interview with Mary Fawcett

Mary Fawcett

Mary Fawcett is the author of Learning Through Child Observation, published by Jessica Kingsley Publishers. She is also an early years consultant and an evaluator for 5x5x5=creativity, an arts-based research organisation.

How did you become interested in Early Childhood Studies?

I decided to become a teacher of young children (as a school leaver) largely because I liked the idea of sharing my enthusiasms, such as music, gardening, literature, scientific ideas, painting, making and cooking. In fact I was able to do all these things as a teacher in the 1950s and 60s. While my children were young I was deeply involved in the early days of the playgroup movement. Through this I learned about adult learning, community development and different forms of provision. With each new experience my fascination with children’s early development increased. Since then the rapid growth in research in the area of Early Childhood Studies has continued to feed my curiosities.

How has the field of child observation has changed since 1996 when the first edition of Learning Through Child Observation was published?

At the time of the first edition I was lecturing on Social Work courses and was surprised at how little preparation there was for these students in terms of observation skills and knowledge of child development. There was a clear gap in the market for students’ books and especially a book for the variety of professional groups concerned with young children. To-day there are many books on observation, but they still tend to concentrate on specific professional groups. The government’s more joined up approach to children’s services now means there is an ever greater need for a multi-professional approach. Though the rhetoric is all about ‘every child matters’, personalisation etc, I feel that prescriptive, goal-driven approaches may have diminished open-minded observation and led to less sensitive understanding. Another factor, addressed in the second edition, is the changing view of children. Through my work with 5x5x5=creativity, as well as personal observations of three grandchildren, over the last few years I have become much more alert to the dynamic capacities of all young children and conscious of how they are underestimated. The second edition also demonstrates the importance of the many forms of communication children use to express their feelings and ideas.

The new edition of your book includes insights from your work with the arts based educational project 5x5x5 = creativity. Can you tell us more about the organisation?

5x5x5=creativity is an arts-based educational research project that has been evolving over the last 9 years. The name came from the first cohort of five early year’s settings working with five artists in collaboration with five cultural centres (galleries, theatre, music centre, etc). The project is concerned with creativity in its broadest sense – Anna Craft calls this ‘life-wide’ creativity – where open-minded problem-solving can be used in all kinds of situations. My observations of hundreds of children through this project has opened my eyes to their brilliant imaginations and their ability to share their fascinations with others through the ‘hundred languages of children’ i.e. through drawing, moving, music, and many other modes as well as talking. This is an important matter since talking, reading and writing tend to overshadow all these other forms. See the website.

What do you think are the main challenges/attractions of working in Early Years settings?

I suspect that my personal enthusiasm for this stage comes through in the answers to the first three questions. Working in the early years can be a time when adults can share the excitement of discovery with these intrepid young explorers if the conditions are positive. Children need an environment which supports their inbuilt drives – especially their curiosity and intense desire to communicate with others. This playfulness, energy and sense of fun are nature’s ways of ensuring that each generation develops and grows to their best advantage. However, in the drive to regulate and ‘raise standards’, to achieve targets and to ensure safety (none of these are undesirable in themselves) those working with young children often seem very pressured and anxious. Maintaining a sense of optimism and remaining open to children’s own energetic efforts towards membership of social groups as well as their individual striving for development is certainly a challenge in the current climate.

What was the last book you read and what are you reading at the moment?

The current book I'm reading (and its taking a long time!) is Charles Dickens’ Little Dorrit.

Copyright © Jessica Kingsley Publishers 2009

Learning Through Child Observation

Learning Through Child Observation: 2nd edition is released this month and is now available for purchase. See the below link for more details.

More details of the book




JKP News

The Evening Standard featured an article about a blood test that can predict the success of IVF treatments.
JKP author Caroline Gallup participated in the case study for this article; she is also the author of Making Babies the Hard Way.

Teachers TV featured an interview with JKP author Linda Goldman, where she talked about the common questions asked by pupils about death and dying, based on her new book Great Answers to Difficult Questions about Death: What Children Need to Know.

Social work in the news - some of the articles in the media this month

The Guardian has featured an article about Social care professionals being cautious over new funding plans.

Community Care have featured an article on the Coalition wanting social work support for young adult offenders.

Children and Young People Now have published a news story on the sharp rise in number of adopted children returned to care.

Children and Young People Now have published a news story on how a local indicator will ensure that Child Poverty Bill duties are met.


This month's author feature
Children Living with Fear: Recognizing and Healing the Trauma
by JKP author Linda Goldman

Linda Goldman

Ordinary fears are a normal part of a child’s developmental growth, and children create internal and external mechanisms to cope with these fears. But a child’s “ordinary fears” can be transformed into very real “survival fears” in the face of severe trauma.

Children witness untold traumas in their homes, schools, communities, and nations.

Signs of traumatized children:

Caring adults need to recognize the signs of grieving and traumatized children, and they need to be aware of the techniques and resources available to help bring safety and protection back to the child’s inner and outer world. For example, listening to children’s thoughts and feelings and providing a safe means of expression helps teachers, parents, and educators reinforce their ability to ensure a safe and protected environment.

Traumatized children tend to re-create their trauma, often experiencing bad dreams, waking fears, and reoccurring flashbacks.. Young children have a very hard time putting these behaviours into any context of safety. Many withdraw and isolate themselves, regress and appear anxious, and develop sleeping and eating disorders as a mask for the deep interpretations of their trauma.

When caring adults can identify traumatized kids, they can normalize grief and trauma signs and develop ways kids can express their feelings and emotions. Parents, educators, and other caring professionals can model, present, and support comfortable ways to bring safety and protection back into kids’ lives.

It is important to initiate safe places for kids to express their ideas. This can be done by finding quiet times at home, in the car, or on a peaceful walk. Being with children without distractions can produce a comfortable climate to begin dialogue. Bedtime should be a reassuring time, too. Often this is the time children choose to talk about their worries. Parents can consider an increase in transition time, storytelling, and book reading to create a peaceful, uninterrupted nightime environment.

One goal of trauma work with children is to restore safety and protection to all children who have experienced trauma within their homes, schools, and community. Another goal is to provide parents and youth works with information understanding, and skills related to the issues creating trauma. With these tools we can help our children become less fearful and more compassionate human beings, thereby increasing their chances of living in a future world of increased inner and outer peace.

Linda Goldman (2009). Great Answers to Difficult Questions about Death: What Children Need to Know. London, Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

Linda Goldman (2006). Children Also Grieve: Talking about Death and Healing. London, Jessica Kingsley Publishers.

Copyright © Jessica Kingsley Publishers 2009

Great Answers to Difficult Questions about Death:
What Children Need to Know

Linda Goldman is the author of Great Answers to Difficult Questions about Death: What Children Need to Know ®. See the below link for more details.

More details of the book


Content links

JKP Social Work books

Learning Through Child Observation

Learning Through Child Observation
2nd edition
Mary Fawcett

Click for more details


A Short Introduction to Attachment and Attachment Disorder

A Short Introduction to Attachment and Attachment Disorder
Colby Pearce

Click for more details


Creative Coping Skills for Children

Creative Coping Skills for Children
Emotional Support through Arts and Crafts Activities
Bonnie Thomas

Click for more details


Quality Matters in Children's Services

Quality Matters in Children's Services
Messages from Research
Mike Stein

Click for more details


Safeguarding Children in Primary Health Care

Safeguarding Children in Primary Health Care
Edited by Julie Taylor and Markus Themessl-Huber

Click for more details


Safeguarding Children Living with Trauma and Family Violence

Safeguarding Children Living with Trauma and Family Violence
Evidence-Based Assessment, Analysis and Planning Interventions
Arnon Bentovim, Antony Cox, Liza Bingley Miller and Stephen Pizzey

Click for more details


Fostering a Child's Recovery

Fostering a Child's Recovery
Family Placement for Traumatized Children
Mike Thomas and
Terry Philpot
Foreword by Mary Walsh

Click for more details


Enriched Care Planning for People with Dementia

Enriched Care Planning for People with Dementia
A Good Practice Guide to Delivering Person-Centred Care
Hazel May, Paul Edwards and Dawn Brooker

Click for more details


Authentic Dialogue with Persons who are Developmentally Disabled

Authentic Dialogue with Persons who are Developmentally Disabled
Sad Without Tears
Jennifer Hill

Click for more details


Great Answers to Difficult Questions about Death

Activities for Adults with Learning Disabilities
Having Fun, Meeting Needs
Helen Sonnet and Ann Taylor

Click for more details


Alphabet Kids - From ADD to Zellweger Syndrome

Health and Safety:
A Workbook for Social Care Workers
Suzan Collins

Click for more details


Reflecting On and Developing Your Practice:
A Workbook for Social Care Workers

Reflecting On and Developing Your Practice:
A Workbook for Social Care Workers
Suzan Collins

Click for more details

Email us with your news, events or feedback at news@jkp.com or visit our website for more on our books.

Please feel free to forward this message on to anyone who might be interested, or want to join our mailing list.


Useful Dates for your Calendar

What Where When Link
International Conference on Parental Problems: Child Related Issues Hampshire, United Kingdom 24/08/2009 Conference info
The past, the present, the future Middlesex University, Hendon Campus, London 09/09/2009 Conference info
BASPCAN 7th National Congress 'Changing Landscapes, Emerging Challenges' Swansea University, UK 13/09/2009 Conference info
The Dementia Services Development Centre's 3rd International Conference University of Stirling, UK 15/09/2009 Conference info
Working With Adults Who Misuse Substances TBC - London 14/10/2009 Conference info