Anonymous wrote:We use it at our FCPS school.
Anonymous wrote:I saw a very old thread about all the kids in the Unstuck and On Target program being really sweet, cooperative kids. One of the people posting on the thread said her child who was having issues at the time was not accepted into the program.
PPs who are doing the program now or have done it recently do you agree with this? Trying to figure out if the profile of the type of kid in the program.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. PP would you recommend for a child who can already ID feelings and identify what went wrong but who still continues to have occasional overreactions?
New poster. Yes, that sounds fine. They work on making the implicit explicit, so it can help kids who need support in monitoring their own emotional state or other's feelings towards them. For example, they do a lot with showing the changes over time of their 'reputation' with the teachers, by having a scale on the board and showing how it moves up or down in response to specific actions by the kid. It shows them a lot about how others form their feelings towards them, how those feelings are more stable than they often expect, and that small positive changes don't fix everything instantly but do add up over time.
Anonymous wrote:NP. PP would you recommend for a child who can already ID feelings and identify what went wrong but who still continues to have occasional overreactions?
Anonymous wrote:NP. PP would you recommend for a child who can already ID feelings and identify what went wrong but who still continues to have occasional overreactions?
Anonymous wrote:My child is finishing it now. Two things have made it more successful for us than social skills groups we've done in the past: the parent group gives really important information that means we can have more follow through at home and they did an excellent job putting my child with kids at the same level. It's given my child a structure for thinking about behavior that really works for him; he successfully went of anti-anxiety meds for the first time in several years. It targets executive function, not social skills directly. In the semester my child has been in the class, he has become much better at identifying his emotions and identifying (in retrospect) appropriate ways to stay regulated. We're still working on remembering those skills in the moment, but this is a big improvement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child is finishing it now. Two things have made it more successful for us than social skills groups we've done in the past: the parent group gives really important information that means we can have more follow through at home and they did an excellent job putting my child with kids at the same level. It's given my child a structure for thinking about behavior that really works for him; he successfully went of anti-anxiety meds for the first time in several years. It targets executive function, not social skills directly. In the semester my child has been in the class, he has become much better at identifying his emotions and identifying (in retrospect) appropriate ways to stay regulated. We're still working on remembering those skills in the moment, but this is a big improvement.
OP here-
That is awesome! I am happy to hear that you have such positive results. I am also happy to hear that there is a parent component along with the class (that is important to me because I need all of the "training" that I can get). How old is your son? If you don't mind me asking, what is your plan at the end of the semester (another program? a follow-on 'USOT' program). Thanks so much for responding!
Anonymous wrote:My child is finishing it now. Two things have made it more successful for us than social skills groups we've done in the past: the parent group gives really important information that means we can have more follow through at home and they did an excellent job putting my child with kids at the same level. It's given my child a structure for thinking about behavior that really works for him; he successfully went of anti-anxiety meds for the first time in several years. It targets executive function, not social skills directly. In the semester my child has been in the class, he has become much better at identifying his emotions and identifying (in retrospect) appropriate ways to stay regulated. We're still working on remembering those skills in the moment, but this is a big improvement.