
Parents sessions can be held with one or both parents, online. These will be tailored to your specific needs, following a FREE consultation.
Click HERE to book a free consultation
Children and teens are not the only one’s that benefit from therapy support, parents do too! As a parent, experienced teacher and child therapist myself, I know children and teens can behave in a way that we do not like, or in ways that are unhelpful at times. this becomes a problem when it impacts on family, friendships, learning and happiness.
- Is your child behaving in a way that you are not happy with, but you do not know what to do?
- Does your child need support but they are too young to have therapy (Under 6 years old)?
- Does your child need help but they are refusing to or are too anxious to attend therapy sessions themselves?
- Is your child having support at school or elsewhere, but you would like to know more, to support them at home?
- Is everything going well for your child at the moment and you want to help to keep it that way?
If you have answered ‘YES’ to any of the above questions, then parent support sessions are for you!
No parent has all the answers and Google doesn’t take account of the environmental factors that are influencing the way your child behaves. or past traumas that they may have experienced.
Parent support works best when it is one or both parents, sharing their concerns and then following strategies to help to correct these behaviours to become more positive.
Parenting Support: What it Involves
Parenting is one of the most difficult jobs you can do! It is totally acceptable to require some support and guidance from time to time!
Parent sessions can be held with one or both parents, online. These will be tailored to your specific needs, following a FREE consultation.
Parent sessions cover some or all of the following:
- Understanding your needs and the needs of your child
- Understanding your values
- Giving feedback
- Communication
- Negotiation
- Behaviour strategies
- Fears
- Rapport building
- What makes a good parent?
