Educating Children for Cooperation & Contribution, Volume II: The Work of An Adlerian Psychologist in the Schools & Selected Articles

Educating Children for Cooperation & Contribution, Volume II: The Work of An Adlerian Psychologist in the Schools & Selected Articles

Educating Children for Cooperation & Contribution, Volume II: The Work of An Adlerian Psychologist in the Schools & Selected Articles

Educating Children for Cooperation & Contribution, Volume II: The Work of An Adlerian Psychologist in the Schools & Selected Articles

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Overview

Although an abundance of Adlerian child guidance materials has helped educators, therapists, and parents, many still hunger for greater depth, and more effective ways to guide children toward cooperation, and contribution. Trained by Alfred Adler. Anthony Bruck embodied several qualities of his mentor: warmth, gentleness, and creativity. His work with children was reminiscent of Adler's remarkable ability to make immediate contact, winning a child with respect, simple insight, and infectious optimism. This volume includes two of Anthony's unpublished manuscripts and one previously published article, documenting the range of his educational and therapeutic strategies, including his analysis of written essays, class discussions about behavioral problems, the use of graphic clarifiers, and individual interviews with students. With a number of illustrations, he demonstrates the art of questioning children Socratically, leading them gradually to useful insight. Three previously unpublished articles by Alfred Adler emphasize the central importance of preparing children to have an active, courageous attitude toward difficulties. In "The Challenge of Kindergarten," Theodore Grubbe provides practical suggestions for helping children adjust to the school environment. Finally, a series of condensed charts clarify the psychological and educational impact of various teaching styles, strategies for dealing with the mistaken goals of students, and a summary of principles for eliciting cooperation in the classroom. Teachers, parents, and therapists will discover a treasure of creative, child guidance strategies that bring Adler's unique, original legacy to life.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940014403207
Publisher: Alfred Adler Institute of Northwestern Washington
Publication date: 04/09/2012
Series: dycating Children for Cooperation & Contribution , #2
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 134
File size: 217 KB

About the Author

Anthony Bruck was born in Apatin in Southern Hungary (now Northern Yugoslavia), the second of three children. His father was a lawyer with offices in the family home, and at the age of six Bruck began showing an interest in people's problems as he listened to the conversations between his father and his clients. Bruck read voraciously as a child, and was able to read books written in Hungarian, German and French. At the age of twelve, he learned English, Latin, Italian and Serbian. This background in languages contributed greatly to his wide range of understanding human nature and his life long travels throughout the world. Bruck knew Adlerian Psychology in all of its aspects. He became a Classical Adlerian teacher and practitioner who understood, applied, and lived what he taught. Sophia de Vires, another of Adler's students, provides some insight into Bruck's Adlerian Style, "Anthony possessed the loving, giving attitude Adler expected of practitioners. With colleagues and 'co-thinkers', as he liked to call his clients, he shared his knowledge and wit".

Alfred Adler was born in Vienna, Austria on February 7, 1870. During the
early decades of this century he originated the ideas which, to a large
extent, have been incorporated in the mainstream of present-day theory and
practice of psychology and psychopathology.

Theodore Grubbe was a school psychologist in Northern California.
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