Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Lost and Found
Lost and Found: Helping Behaviorally Challenging Students (and, While You're At It, All the Others) | Ross W. Greene
5 posts | 3 read | 1 to read
Implement a more constructive approach to difficult students Lost and Found is a follow-up to Dr. Ross Greene's landmark works, The Explosive Child and Lost at School, providing educators with highly practical, explicit guidance on implementing his Collaborative & Proactive Solutions (CPS) Problem Solving model with behaviorally-challenging students. While the first two books described Dr. Greene's positive, constructive approach and described implementation on a macro level, this useful guide provides the details of hands-on CPS implementation by those who interact with these children every day. Readers will learn how to incorporate students' input in understanding the factors making it difficult for them to meet expectations and in generating mutually satisfactory solutions. Specific strategies, sample dialogues, and time-tested advice help educators implement these techniques immediately. The groundbreaking CPS approach has been a revelation for parents and educators of behaviorally-challenging children. This book gives educators the concrete guidance they need to immediately begin working more effectively with these students. Implement CPS one-on-one or with an entire class Work collaboratively with students to solve problems Study sample dialogues of CPS in action Change the way difficult students are treated The discipline systems used in K-12 schools are obsolete, and aren't working for the kids to whom they're most often applied those with behavioral challenges. Lost and Found provides a roadmap to a different paradigm, helping educators radically transform the way they go about helping their most challenging students.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
review
Zephsomething
post image
Mehso-so

I honestly like this version a lot more than his original (The Explosive Child) but it is still a little slanted towards negative feelings about schools and their current behaviour management plans due to him being an american. I can‘t fault him for this but just be warned going in. I think there will always be things me and Mr. Green disagree on but overall I found it to be a useful read in adapting his plans to a classroom setting.

blurb
Zephsomething
post image

Sometimes cis people get So Close to understanding the entire use of the word They and then it just, fuckin flies over their head

blurb
Zephsomething
post image

Reading this one for work y‘all, gunna go through it fast be prepared for Some Thoughts!

review
BooksForEmpathy
post image
Pickpick

My afternoon! Spent eating this + reading these.

As a school counselor, the tagged book was extremely helpful in solidifying my belief that “all bad behavior is for good reason.” I learned how to identify the unsolved problems that trigger challenging behaviors. Dr. Greene includes an assessment of lagging skills & unsolved problems form (ALSUP) and gives really helpful and simple advice on how to move forward in collaboration with the child.

review
SarahKKillion
post image
Pickpick

Great read for educators!