View Single Post
  #3  
Unread 06-13-2012, 09:11 AM
Ruthierhyme's Avatar
Ruthierhyme Ruthierhyme is offline
Administrator
 
Join Date: Nov 2005
Posts: 7,635
Ruthierhyme has disabled reputation
Default

Hi, resilience is important as it's a mechanism by which children and young people are able to recover from negative experiences .. eg. not recieving the 'star reward they thought they behaved well enough to receive, being knocked whilst waiting their turn at the climbing frame - resilience enables them to react positively/non aggressively to it creating a situation where the other child feels comfortable apologising spontaneously, resilience helps manage the emotions involved if explaining an incident of retalliation others may of considered inappropriate, for young people resilience supports them in knowing where for eg. they say no to drugs/cigarettes the possible abusive teasing or peer pressure this might evoke is expected and can be managed positively .. it also helps when friendships encounter disagreements and romantic/family relationships struggle or breakdown.

Handson Scotland - how to support children becoming resilient

Factors that affect resilience:
• Attachment
• Relationships
• Emotional security
• Health
• Self esteem
• Diet
• Exercise
• Rest and sleep - facts from australia's ABC network site are an interesting read. With credited sources in the UK they'd make good examples for the importance of rest & sleep
• Prompt medical/dental attention when needed
• Preventive health programmes - development checks, immunisations

Hth xx

aka SCMP 2 - 1.2 Explain the importance of resilience for children and young people and CYP 3.3 both help explore resilience, safety and wellbeing and the search page on silkysteps will find threads containing relevant keywords from assessment criteria
Amazon handbook search on amazon
__________________
..................................
Find out what's new on silkysteps
&
the cost of ad blockers
Reply With Quote