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Hot Stuff to Help Kids Chill Out: The Anger Management Book

by Jerry Wilde

   



Product Description:
This book offers a unique approach to one of the most pressing problems of our time. Child psychologist, Dr. Jerry Wilde, speaks directly to children and adolescents in a language they can easily understand. Hot Stuff to Help Kids Chill Out is an empowering book designed to encourage today's youth to manage their anger rather than be controlled by it.

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More Hot Stuff to Help Kids Chill Out: The Anger and Stress Management Book

by Jerry Wilde

   

Book Review:
Reviewer: The Book Guy "Stan" (Iowa City, IA)
If you like Dr. Wilde's book "Hot Stuff to Help Kids Chill Out," you'll love this book. I actually think this one might even be better than the first one because it contains information about stress management for children and adolescents. This book contains many helpful activities that demonstrate to kids that they have the ability to change their thoughts and change their feelings. This is an excellent book for parents and therapists alike!

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A Volcano in My Tummy: Helping Children to Handle Anger : A Resource Book for Parents, Caregivers and Teachers

by Eliane Whitehouse, Warwick Pudney
 

Book Review:
Reviewer: Rachael l Doss (Tuscaloosa, Alabama USA)
I did my social work internship at an elementary school and used this book for the basis of my group work within the school. It was fantastic. There are lots of activities that you can expand upon and mix with your own ideas to use with the kids.
My only difficulty was that I was a school where most of the children had to have many concepts and words explained to them, as they are just not exposed to the type of thinking involved with the activities. Made the book that much more an important tool.

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How to Take the Grrrr Out of Anger

by Elizabeth Verdick, Marjorie Lisovskis
 

Editorial Reviews
From the Publisher: How to Take the Grrrr Out of Anger is the winner of the National Parenting Publication's (NAPPA) 2003 Gold Award in the ages 9 and up category.

Product Description:
Anger is a part of life. We can�t avoid it, we shouldn�t stuff it, and we can�t make it go away. Kids need help learning how to manage their anger. This book speaks directly to kids and offers strategies they can start using immediately. Blending tips and ideas with jokes and funny cartoons, it guides kids to understand that anger is normal and can be expressed in many ways�some healthy, some not. It teaches them how to recognize anger in themselves and others, how to deal with situations and emotions (loneliness, guilt, frustration, fear) that lead to or mask anger, and how to deal with the anger they feel. Young readers learn that violence is not acceptable and there are better, safer ways to resolve conflicts. They also discover what to do when people around them are angry, how to get help, and how to locate other resources (books, hotlines, school groups) when they need more support.

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I'm Mad (Dealing With Feelings)

by Elizabeth Crary

 

Product Description:
Too often kids� feelings get ignored. "I'm Mad" is part of the "Dealing with Feelings" series that help children and adults accept and acknowledge their emotions. It also helps them distinguish between feelings and actions. Even more important, the stories give kids several ways to cope with feelings by utilizing the "choose-your-own-ending" format. They also allow parents and teachers to discuss other situations in a nonjudgmental way.
This story describes a girl whose long-awaited picnic is cancelled by a rainstorm. She's furious! Young readers and their parents can help her decide how to cope with her anger.

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Angry Children, Worried Parents : Seven Steps to Help Families Manage Anger (Seven Steps Family Guides)

by Sam Goldstein, Ph.D., Robert Brooks, M.Ed., Sharon Weiss

 

Product Description:
Acknowledging that anger in children is an emotion that cannot be entirely avoided, this guide for parents outlines a seven-step program to promote healthy anger management in children aged 4 to 14. The advice and experiences of mental health professionals and clinicians who are parents themselves are disclosed, with attention given to the anxiety that many parents feel when their child exhibits angry behavior. Parents learn techniques to help their child deal with stress and anger, build confidence and resilience, and use effective coping behaviors to avoid dysfunctional behavior.

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The explosive child: A New Approach for Understanding and Parenting Easily Frustrated, Chronically Inflexible Children

by Ross W. Greene
 



Book description:
An explosive child who frequently exhibits severe noncompliance, temper outbursts, and verbal or physical aggression. If this sounds like your child, you're probably feeling frustrated, guilt-ridden, and overwhelmed. At last, Dr. Ross Greene offers help for you and your child. Now updated with new practical information, The Explosive Child lays out a sensitive, practical approach to helping your child at home and school, including:

  • reducing hostility and antagonism between the child and adults
  • anticipating situations in which the child is most likely to explode
  • creating an environment in which explosions are less likely to occur
  • focusing less on reward and punishment and more on communication and collaborating problem solving
  • helping your child develop the skills to be more flexible and handle frustration more adaptively

In The Explosive Child, you'll find ways to regain and optimism and to handle your child's difficulties competently and with compassion. With Dr. Green's realistic, expert advice, you and your child will discover a relationship you can both feel good about.

Book review:
Flexibility and tolerance are learned skills, as any parent knows if they've seen an irascible 2-year-old grow into a pleasant, thoughtful, and considerate older child. Unfortunately, for reasons that are poorly understood, a few children don't "get" this part of socialization. Years after toddler tantrums should have become an unpleasant memory, a few unlucky parents find themselves battling with sudden, inexplicable, disturbingly violent rages--along with crushing guilt about what they "did wrong." Medical experts haven't helped much: the flurry of acronyms and labels (Tourette's, ADHD, ADD, etc.) seems to proffer new discoveries about the causes of such explosions, when in fact the only new development is alternative vocabulary to describe the effects. Ross Greene, a pediatric psychologist who also teaches at Harvard Medical School, makes a bold and humane attempt in this book to cut through the blather and speak directly to the (usually desperate) parents of explosive children. His text is long and serious, and has the advantage of covering an enormous amount of ground with nuance, detail, and sympathy, but also perhaps the disadvantage that only those parents who are not chronically tired and time-deprived are likely to get through the entire book. Quoted dialogue from actual sessions with parents and children is interspersed with analysis that is always oriented toward understanding the origins of "meltdowns" and developing workable strategies for avoidance. Although pharmacological treatment is not the book's focus, there is a chapter on drug therapies.
 

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In control: A skill-building program for teaching young adolescents to manage

By Millicent Kellner

 

Book review:
"I have had the opportunity to use the program with two groups of young adolescents, and have found the manual an excellent guide to both discussion and follow-up "homework" activities. The "Log" has been especially well received by both kids and parents. I have used it in a private practice setting, and would imagine that it would be just as useful in an institutional setting. I recommend the manual to anyone thinking about using an anger management program with adolescents." A social worker from New Jersey

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Treating anger, anxiety, and depression in children and adolescents: A cognitive-behavioral perspective

By Jerry Wilde
 

Book description:
"Nearly all childhood problems fall somewhere within the "big three" � anger, anxiety and depression", claims Jerry Wilde, PhD, author of this new guide to treating the most prevalent problems facing children and Adolescents Today Way Of Rational-Emotive Behaviour Therapy (REBT); Wilde applies a cognitive-behavioural perspective to the "big three" when working with young people in both individual or group and school or private settings. He teaches novice and seasoned practitioners the requisite techniques for turning cognitive-behavioural theory into actual REBT progress in the lives of children and adolescents.; For each of the "big three", the book examines causes and effective treatments/interventions and supplies a six to eight week group counselling guide, plus verbatim transcripts of sessions with clients. Also provided is an extensive overview of REBT.; As young people learn that they are not disturbed by events, but by views they take of events, they acquire skills for a lifetime of self-control over anger, anxiety and depression in the classroom, workplace and home. The techniques detailed in this guide should make that goal more accessible.
 

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Don't rant and rave on Wednesdays!: The children's anger-control book

By Adolph Moser, David Melton and Nancy Thatch

 

Book description:
The Emotional Impact Series... Anger can be a powerful and frightening emotion for children to see in others and experience in themselves. In this book, Dr. Moser explains the causes of anger and offers methods that can help children reduce the amount of anger they feel. He also gives effective techniques to help young people control their behavior, even when they are angry. This book will delight both children and adults. It's informative and it's bun because Dr. Moser examines the complex feelings of human anger with the proper blend of sensitivity and humor. And David Melton's colorful illustrations are bright and witty.
Counselors, teachers, parents and children who have read and used Dr. Moser's previous books are sure to welcome Don't Rant & Rave on Wednesdays

 

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