The Science of Making Friends: Helping Socially Challenged Teens and Young Adults
English
By (author): Elizabeth A. Laugeson Elizabeth Laugeson
The groundbreaking book that puts the focus on teens and young adults with social challenges
This book offers parents a step-by-step guide to making and keeping friends for teens and young adults with social challengessuch as those diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder, ADHD, bipolar, or other conditions. With the books concrete rules and steps of social etiquette, parents will be able to assist in improving conversational skills, expanding social opportunities, and developing strategies for handling peer rejection.
Each chapter provides helpful overview information for parents; lessons with clear bulleted lists of key rules and steps; and expert advice on how to present the material to a teen or young adult. Throughout the book are role-playing exercises for practicing each skill, along with homework assignments to ensure the newly learned skills can be applied easily to a school, work, or other real life setting. Bonus content shows role-plays of skills covered, demonstrating the right and wrong way to enter conversations, schedule get-togethers, deal with conflict, and much more.
- PART ONE: GETTING READY
- Ch. 1: Why Teach Social Skills to Teens and Young Adults?
- PART TWO: THE SCIENCE OF DEVELOPING AND MAINTAINING FRIENDSHIPS
- Ch. 2: Finding and Choosing Good Friends
- Ch. 3: Good Conversations: The Basics
- Ch. 4: Starting and Entering Conversations
- Ch. 5: Exiting Conversations
- Ch. 6: Managing Electronic Communication
- Ch. 7: Showing Good Sportsmanship
- Ch. 8: Enjoying Successful Get-Togethers
- PART THREE: THE SCIENCE OF HANDLING PEER CONFLICT AND REJECTION: HELPFUL STRATEGIES
- Ch. 9: Dealing With Arguments
- Ch. 10: Handling Verbal Teasing
- Ch. 11: Addressing Cyber Bullying
- Ch. 12: Minimizing Rumors and Gossip
- Ch. 13: Avoiding Physical Bullying
- Ch. 14: Changing a Bad Reputation
Epilogue: Moving Forward