Often children show us how they are feeling through their behaviors. Whether a child is withdrawn, anxious, melting down or getting into fights, these behaviors are a form of communication. As this service help kids to explore themselves and the environment around them and uncover the feeling beneath the behavior and give voice to the child’s needs.
What is child and adolescent therapy?
Child therapy, or counseling for kids, is an evidence-based approach to counseling, designed to help children and teens their challenges. These challenges include mental illnesses, traumatic events, the loss of family members, difficult feelings and behaviors.
S.E.M.P.É is well-equipped to work with children and understand how their minds work. This enables them to break down their problems in a way they can understand.
Who should seek child counseling?
Imagine what it is like for a child who cannot express themselves. Therapy can serve as a guiding light for them.
Kids can benefit from talking to a counselor, from a child suffering amid their parents’ divorce to a depressed teen who’s being bullied at school. Common issues not limited to the following addressed in child therapy:
- Mental health diagnoses
- Death of a loved one
- Abuse (sexual, emotional, physical, mental)
- Addiction in the family
- Experiencing a traumatic event
- Moving to a new town
- Starting at a new school
- Bullying
- Divorce
It is not always easy to tell when your child or teen might need therapy—even if they are dealing with one of the issues above. Here are some signs that your child is, indeed, having a difficult time and might need (or could benefit from) therapy:
- Change in appetite
- Significant weight loss or gain
- Difficulty sleeping
- Unwarranted aggression
- Persistent anxiety and nerves
- Failing or worsening grades
- Social isolation
- Alcohol or drug use
- Self-harm
- Expression of suicidal thoughts
Child therapy focuses on each child’s specific needs. The therapists at S.E.M.P.É are equipped with the skills to cater treatment to each young individual they work with.
What will be the parent’s role in the child’s therapy?
The more involved the parent will be. We like parents to know what their child is working on and will recommend ways that you can help your child practice the tools we teach. For children and young adolescents especially, parents are often active participants in the sessions. We obtain feedback from parents on a regular basis, in addition to providing our own feedback on a child’s progress.
In addition to child counseling, family therapy is also incorporated when needed, in order to reduce stress and conflict in the home. We take an individualized approach with each child, so your involvement will be specific to helping your child achieve the well-being every child deserves.
There is hope for any child…
Identifying strengths as a parent you have not recognized, helps to build on those strengths and provide new strategies for the parent and child to try at home. Similarly, kids also have strengths that he/she may not yet recognize. We can help the child build on these strengths, allowing them to feel more confident, competent, and self-assured.
We are trained in the specific developmental needs of children and recognize indicators that a child may need some extra support. S.E.M.P.É uses evidence-based treatment modalities for children. The therapists work with the children in a number of different ways to help the process and cope with emotions in the same ways that therapists support adults. The therapists utilize a variety of treatment modalities and will usually pull from a variety of techniques to best meet your child’s unique needs. Some techniques not limited to the following:
What is cognitive-behavior therapy?
Cognitive-behavior therapy focuses on changing the thoughts and emotions that can affect a child’s behavior negatively.
The therapist helps the child become aware of their thoughts and feelings. The therapist also helps the child evaluate if feelings or thoughts may be distorted or illogical, and then helps the child through the process of changing the thoughts as well as the emotional reactions and behaviors that go along with them.
Cognitive-behavior therapy often works directly with the child, but can also include parents.
Play Therapy
Involves the use of toys, blocks, dolls, puppets, drawings, and games to help the child recognize, identify, and verbalize feelings. The psychotherapist observes how the child uses play materials and identifies themes or patterns to understand the child’s problems. Through a combination of talk and play the child has an opportunity to better understand and manage their conflicts, feelings, and behavior.
Why Play?
Play is the child’s language and …
Play is a fun, enjoyable activity that elevates our spirits and brightens our outlook on life. It expands self-expression, self-knowledge, self-actualization and self-efficacy. Play relieves feelings of stress and boredom, connects us to people in a positive way, stimulates creative thinking and exploration, regulates our emotions, and boosts our ego. In addition, play allows us to practice skills and roles needed for survival. Learning and development are best fostered through play.
How Does Play Therapy Work?
Children are referred for play therapy to resolve their problems. Often, children have used up their own problem solving tools, and they misbehave, may act out at home, with friends, and at school. Play therapy allows us to assess and understand children’s play. Further, play therapy is utilized to help children cope with difficult emotions and find solutions to problems. By confronting problems in the clinical Play Therapy setting, children find healthier solutions. Play therapy allows children to change the way they think about, feel toward, and resolve their concerns. Even the most troubling problems can be confronted in play therapy and lasting resolutions can be discovered, rehearsed, mastered and adapted into lifelong strategies.
Family therapy
Offers support to children, along with their families. A child therapist can work with families to help parents and children navigate through a child’s challenges and needs. Children with behavioral issues often hear more negative feedback than positive, which can negatively impact their self-esteem and worsen behaviors. A child therapist can work with parents to develop behavior plans and other positive reinforcement strategies to help parents most effectively manage their child’s behaviors and boost their self-esteem.
Group therapy
May help children who struggle with behavior issues or who need emotional support. Group therapy allows children to interact with peers who are facing similar problems. Group therapy can help children build social skills and self-esteem. It can let children know that they are not alone and that there are other children who are facing similar challenges.