
Most courses in counseling, social work, therapy, and clinical psychology programs lump clinical work with "children and adolescents" together into a single unit while the social, emotional, physical, and neurobiological development of youth is often only a portion of a development course that covers the entire human lifespan. The consequence is twofold: department chairs, accrediting agencies, administrators, and faculty are tasked with covering too much content in too few course hours; and graduate students and beginning practitioners are woefully unprepared for working with difficult populations, including teenagers and young adults. Evidence-Based Psychotherapy with Adolescents helps new clinicians working in any treatment setting learn how to conduct psychotherapy with adolescents from a place of understanding and empathy. In addition to addressing adolescent development, psychological theories in practice, neurobiology of adolescents, clinical assessment, and evidence-based treatment approaches for a range of common mental health concerns, the text explains how to build therapeutic alliances with adolescent clients and work with vulnerable populations commonly seen in treatment. A complete guide that empowers readers with the insight and tools necessary to support adolescents as they progress towards adulthood, this book effectively builds the core skill sets of students and new clinicians in social work, psychology, psychiatry, and marriage and family therapy.
How can new clinicians effectively bridge the gap between academic theory and the practical demands of providing evidence-based psychotherapy to adolescent populations? Joanna E. Bettmann, an experienced practitioner and educator, addresses the systemic deficiency in graduate training where adolescent-specific clinical skills are often marginalized. The text synthesizes neurobiological research, developmental psychology, and established therapeutic frameworks to provide a structured approach for clinicians working in diverse treatment settings. By focusing on the unique requirements of the teenage demographic, the author provides a roadmap for building therapeutic alliances and implementing targeted interventions for common mental health concerns.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Practitioners and educators frequently cite this text as a necessary resource for filling the gap in graduate-level clinical training programs. Experts highlight the book's utility as a foundational tool for new clinicians who require actionable strategies for managing complex adolescent cases.
Page Count:
312
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190880082
ISBN-13:
9780190880088
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!