photo by:
Mel B.
Children have a wide range of emotions. Besides anxiety, fears, shyness, depression, anxious, and resentment, there are many other emotions that children feel. For example, happy, sad, grief, hurt are just to name a few emotions that children often feel.
Additional Content
showing 11 - 15 of 16
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11.
Specific Phobias
A specific phobia is defined as the intense, irrational fear of a specific object, such as a dog, or a situation, such...
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12.
Talking to Kids About Terrorism or Acts of War
Updated by Marylene Cloitre, Ph.D. Reports of attacks in different places around the world may prompt questions among...
Source: NYU Child Study Center -
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Social Services for Emotional/Behavioral Disorders
Cohen (1980) argues that services for families occur within a system of interrelated and interacting parts. The client...
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14.
Anger Management
When Case Western Reserve University psychologist Diane Tice asked 400 people about how they manage their moods, she...
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15.
Biological Interventions for Emotional/Behavioral Disorders
The two primary interventions related to the biological bases of emotional/behavioral disorders involve the use of...

