Building Block Articles on Parenting Emerging and Young Adults
Relationships and Time Structuring
This classic article from the long-standing best seller "Born to Win" explains how all human beings use the twenty-four hours we all have each day that we live to do two things: (1) relate to other human beings at one or more of six levels of relationship and (2) use the twenty-four hour clock time that we all have, can not add to, nor get rid of (and we all have tried both!). To read this article, click here.
The Human Mind: Four (4) Different Domains
Coming up with a universal explanation for the way humans develop from infant to adult is no easy task. As it stands, there is no one theory or model that all experts scribe to but rather a number of different theories which are neither completely right or completely wrong. To read about all of these models, go to: http://ksspaulding.wordpress.com/article/human-development-theory-3smazt4fj02nv-8/
As a way to begin to utilize what is known by social scientists about how human beings function, and for this book, specifically learn, this recently compiled article suggests that the human mind actually exists via four different, yet related, domains: Cognitive, Affective, Psychomotor and Behavioral.
After a brief explanation of each of these domains, the article switches to a similar approach to comprehending how human beings function psychological from a well-known model known as Transactional Analysis . To read about this approach and these four domains, click here.
As a way to begin to utilize what is known by social scientists about how human beings function, and for this book, specifically learn, this recently compiled article suggests that the human mind actually exists via four different, yet related, domains: Cognitive, Affective, Psychomotor and Behavioral.
After a brief explanation of each of these domains, the article switches to a similar approach to comprehending how human beings function psychological from a well-known model known as Transactional Analysis . To read about this approach and these four domains, click here.
Truisms on Parenting Emerging/Young Adults.
_Truisms are saying or beliefs that a lot of people in a particular group or country believe to be true. Truisms themselves do not have lengthy or detailed definitions because they are not evaluated to be true by definition but is
an argument that is considered to be true by the vast majority of
people; Thus, most people believe that a truism offered is not
disputable. The thirty (3) Truisms listed in the two sections of the webpages pertaining to Truism's are one's Drs. Cogswell & Cousert have found to be very popular in the families in the families they have counseled. To begin to read these Truisms, click here.
FAQ's (Frequently Asked Questions) on Parenting EA/ YA's .
The five sections listed here are both questions and some answers to ponder and put to use. The answers are not absolute, and do not take the place of the advise of a family counselor or therapist, but offer a place to begin and a philosophy to apply to situations that come up in many extended families when your 'kids" grow up to be adults but still interact with you. The situations offered are based on real life situations known to Dr. Cogswell and/or Dr. Cousert over decades of counseling practice and heavily disguised for confidentially purposes. In many places, these would be called 'case studies' There are five main sections, all with different but related short case studies. To begin to read them in Section One, Click Here.