Diagnosis and Remediation Practices for Troubled School Children
By (Author) Harold F. Burks
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Rowman & Littlefield Education
28th February 2008
United States
General
Non Fiction
Educational administration and organization
Philosophy and theory of education
Education / Educational sciences / Pedagogy
Teaching of students with different educational needs
Child, developmental and lifespan psychology
Psychotherapy: child and adolescent
371.93
Paperback
350
Width 218mm, Height 280mm, Spine 25mm
980g
In this resource for educators, Harold F. Burks offers a comprehensive guide to the evaluation techniques and intervention strategies that have worked with many school children experiencing problems. Thus, Diagnosis and Remediation Practices for Troubled School Children attempts to: clarify the understanding of observed, unwanted child behavior symptoms (whether they be physical, intellectual, academic or social in nature); investigate with educators and parentsand sometimes childrenthe possible causal factors that antedate these behavior manifestations; create in cooperation with parents and school personnel, innovative intervention techniques to help children learn accepted behavior patterns.
The methods outlined in the book are intended for teachers, principals, school psychologists, school nurses, guidance personnel, and persons in related professions such as social workers, clinical psychologists and psychiatrists.
It is assumed the readers will have acquired a rudimentary knowledge of psychological dynamics (acquired through college courses) in the areas of diagnostic methods, aberrant behavior, personality theory, learning disorders, special education, and counseling techniques. This book is appropriate for use in graduate courses concerned with child exceptionality and psychopathology.
Harold F. Burks has worked as a school teacher and university professor, as well as a school and clinical psychologist.