Teen Safety Workbook: Facilitator Reproducible Self-Assessments, Exercises & Educational Handouts

Teen Safety Workbook: Facilitator Reproducible Self-Assessments, Exercises & Educational Handouts

presented by John J. Liptak, fl. 1990 and Ester A. Leutenberg, fl. 2010 (Duluth, MN: Whole Person Associates, 2012, originally published 2012), 132 page(s)

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Abstract / Summary
Being a teen has always been challenging, but today teens face issues that have been compounded by a rapidly changing society and a plethora of technology. These changes require new strategies in ways to teach teens to protect themselves from the challenges they will constantly face in school and community, and with their friends and family.Some of the areas in which teens need to worry about their personal safety include:• Risks related to violence including bullying, exposure to gangs, and harm from guns and other weapons. • Online dangers including harassment, cyber-bullying, sexually explicit materials, identity theft and financial theft and scams, and agreeing to meet strangers in person after developing online relationships.• Victimization of crimes.• Risks while driving in dangerous ways, including driving after drinking or taking drugs, underestimating dangerous road situations, texting or using cell phones inappropriately and not wearing seat belts. • Putting themselves in personal danger by pressures to do things they do not want to do such as experimenting with drugs and alcohol, having unprotected sex, going to unsafe places by themselves and engaging in risky behaviors. For teens, staying safe is a much more difficult task than in the past. To help teens sharpen their awareness of the need and ways to stay safe, the Teen Safety Workbook will guide them as they explore situations fraught with danger and face people who may threaten their safety.During adolescence, teens are eager to press to become more independent from their parents, caregivers or family. They need to learn to be more responsible for their own safety. Regardless of whether they are at home, school, work, or in the community, or online, they must face great safety hazards and need to be aware of them. Teen’s judgment levels are still forming; most are not ready to make adult level decisions. It is vital for teens to learn that they have the power to keep themselves safe and to be equipped with the tools to overcome dangerous situations.The Teen Safety Workbook is designed to help teens engage in self-reflection, examine their thoughts and feelings that go into the decisions they make, and learn effective tools and techniques to stay safe in the future. This book combines two powerful psychological tools for the management of unsafe, potentially dangerous thoughts, feelings, and behaviors: self-assessment and journaling.The Teen Safety Workbook contains five separate sections to help the participants learn more about the choices they have made and the choices they have yet to make in their lives:• Positive Feelings Scale helps teens explore the negative feelings they are experiencing in life and learn effective methods to constructively express their emotions. • Healthy Choices Scale helps teens explore how healthy or unhealthy their lifestyle choices are. • Social Media Safety Scale helps teens explore safe behaviors while texting, chatting, using social media sites, and surfing the Internet. • Relationship Safety Scale helps teens explore the safety in their family, friendships, and dating relationships. • Self-Harm Scale helps teens explore the extent to which they deliberately harm themselves in attempts to cope with intense, overwhelming emotions.Enrichment activities at the end of each chapter are a third tool for facilitators of teens from families struggling with substance abuse.
Field of Interest
Counseling & Therapy
Copyright Message
Copyright © 2012 Whole Person Associates. All rights reserved.
Content Type
Book
Duration
0 sec
Format
Text
Original Publication Date
2012
Page Count
132
Publication Year
2012
Publisher
Whole Person Associates
Place Published / Released
Duluth, MN
Subject
Counseling & Therapy, Psychology & Counseling, Health Sciences, Group Counseling, Developmental Counseling, Education, development, and training, Youth, Psychological issues, Decision-making, Teenage adjustment, Adolescent psychology
Clinician
John J. Liptak, fl. 1990, Ester A. Leutenberg, fl. 2010

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