Why Can''t I Help this Child to Learn?: Understanding Emotional Barriers to Learning
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
The book outlines theories of child development from the point of view of the kinds of relationships children make with adults and the effects of their relationships on their learning. In addition, anxieties that some children show about reading, writing and arithmetic are described. In exploring these issues the book draws on Attachment Theory and on Psychoanalytic theories of emotional development. It includes detailed case studies to illustrate ways in which children's learning can be hindered by their difficulties in relating to teachers and the feelings and fantasies that some children have about words and letters. There has been recent political concern that children should all learn to read in their early years at school and extra help should be offered to those who are falling behind. The expectation in political circles seems to be, however, that straightforward extra help with reading will be sufficient, in all cases, to enable a child who has fallen behind to catch up. There has been no general recognition of the need to address underlying emotional problems in some cases, such as those described in this book.
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Product Details
Dimensions: 147 x 230mm
Publication Date: 31 Dec 2012
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781855757875
About
Helen High is a retired educational psychotherapist and child and adolescent psychotherapist. She formerly taught on and served on the training committee of the child and adolescent psychotherapy training at the British Association of Psychotherapists London. She is a founder member of the Caspari Foundation London which runs the training in educational psychotherapy - a method of working with children whose emotional problems give rise to difficulties in learning that is the subject of this book. She has had ten articles published eight of them in professional journals and two as chapters in books. Having graduated in psychology at Manchester University Helen went on to take the postgraduate certificate in education there. She then taught for three years in primary schools in London. She trained as an educational psychologist at the Tavistock Clinic where Irene Caspari was one of her tutors and supervised her on work with children who were failing to learn to read adequately in spite of normal intelligence. This was the work that Caspari developed combining remedial teaching with activities that lend themselves to self-expression that is now known as educational psychotherapy.