Child and Adolescent Psychology PDF

Summary

This document details key concepts in child and adolescent psychology. The topics discussed include analogue direct observation, parent training, psychodynamic play therapy, and other relevant areas within the field. The text provides insight into various psychological approaches and applications.

Full Transcript

Child and Adolescent Psychology naturalistic direct observation – In contrast to analogue direct observation, a type of behavioral observation in which a behavior is analogue dir...

Child and Adolescent Psychology naturalistic direct observation – In contrast to analogue direct observation, a type of behavioral observation in which a behavior is analogue direct observation – In contrast to naturalistic direct observed in the place where it actually happens observation, a type of behavioral observation that typically takes place in the clinic room, where the real-life situation is simulated parent training – A form of behavioral consultation in which the therapist serves as a consultant to a parent, who ultimately implements behavior rating scales – In clinical child psychology, standardized the behavioral interventions with the child in the home forms that parents, teachers, or other adults complete regarding a child’s presenting problems pediatric psychology – A specialty area within clinical child psychology focusing on the mental and physical health of children with clinical child psychology – An area of specialization within clinical medical conditions psychology focusing on issues of children psychodynamic play therapy – A form of psychotherapy with children developmental perspective – An essential aspect of clinical child in which a child’s play symbolically communicates important psychology whereby clinicians understand the child’s behavior within unconscious processes occurring within the child’s mind the context of the child’s developmental stage reactivity – In the context of behavioral observation, a problem externalizing disorders – In clinical child psychology, disorders in whereby the client’s behavior may change simply because of his or her which the child “acts out” and often becomes a disruption to parents, awareness of the presence of the observer teachers, or other children resilience – In contrast to vulnerability, the tendency to remain humanistic play therapy – A form of psychotherapy with children psychologically healthy in spite of the presence of risk factors that emphasizing reflection of feelings in the context of a genuinely contribute to psychological problems in others empathic and unconditionally accepting therapeutic relationship to facilitate self-actualization self-instructional training – A treatment method intended to help impulsive and disruptive children gain greater control over their internalizing disorders – In clinical child psychology, disorders that behavior involve maladaptive thoughts and feelings more than disruptive outward behavior self-report scales – Assessment techniques that are completed directly by the client Donald Meichenbaum – The creator of self-instructional training, a treatment method intended to help impulsive and disruptive children Society of Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychology – Division 53 of gain greater control over their behavior the American Psychological Association, focusing on issues related to clinical psychology applied to children and adolescents multisource, multimethod, multisetting approach – An approach to the assessment involving multiple sources of information, multiple Vulnerability – In contrast to resilience, the tendency to experience methods of obtaining information, and multiple settings in which psychological problems in the presence of risk factors information is solicited

Use Quizgecko on...
Browser
Browser