Consultants intervene in the lives of children
Maggie is a busy Duwelius senior high school with his sights set on a university competitive and difficult. Work hard, her mother said, but often their grades fall below the goal as she navigates a whirlwind of extracurricular activities: sports, shares short as a volunteer, voice lessons, caring for babies. Maggie’s self-imposed much of that burden, felt he was losing control over their own lives, with up to six hours of homework every night and as little as five hours of sleep.
“Of my three children, she is far more motivated which in itself, but it is one of those girls who by nature can say, ‘I can enter this examination with a pencil and solve it very well,”’ said Duwelius Sarah his mother in the suburbs of Portland, Oregon. “I see her working so hard and I thought there must be another way.”
That’s where the consultant intervened in the life of Maggie, part of a trend in recent years to extend to high school students unconventional assistance given to adults. The life advice for young people is not only to refine study habits or staying organized, but these things are part of what John Williams does with Maggie. These young people take control of your life.
“It has more to do with the internal motion, where is the next frontier of education,” said Williams, a former Latin teacher. “The advice he gives a place to talk about the things you plan to do, what activities to participate, how they should allocate their time, what is most important to her.”
As a former high school teacher, Williams said he saw “the kids were not getting many essential skills that I wish I had received, and the ability to understand a preset perspective and how to change that perspective, or just to be aware of what are your three most important values, how you feel about certain relationships and assumptions made in relations. “
The need for Maggie’s mother is much more simple: “He is taking a good thing and making it better. She is giving even more tools and making it succeed.”
Life Counseling can provide a valuable analysis for the kids apart from the praise, criticism and recommendations for parents and therapists could provide normally.
“The great thing about advice is that the identification and resolution of problems stem from the person receiving the advice,” said Sharon Haynes, whose 11 year old daughter began to meet with a life coach in Houston after a stressful way to secondary school.
I found myself talking to my daughter again and again, encouraging her and telling her everything would be fine, but it helps to go through it accompanied by someone else, “he said. Haynes’s daughter, Tuesday, said his adviser, “has helped show me the pros and cons of different situations and different perspectives. It helped me discover my little monster WIIC, and that helps me see that I have to be so nervous and that makes me worry WIIC no reason. “
WIIC are the acronym of “What happens if I can.”
A year after he began receiving counseling of life, the ability to speak freely with Williams is something that still makes Maggie wait for the session with interest.
“We can talk about anything,” he said. “It’s a much better conversation than you can have with someone else. I always leave feeling better there. He makes the school makes sense.”
The advisers of life, at least 25,000 worldwide, are not regulated in the United States, although a nonprofit organization called the International Federation of Advisors (FIA) and other agencies are working to unify the training and standards.
More than half of all consultants working life in the U.S., according to the FIA, but it is unknown how many adolescents they accept as clients. Some charge by the hour and others require a minimum number of sessions. Prices vary, but are comparable with those of psychological therapy. Not all teens will see benefits to the advice of life. In Chicago, the son of Robin Simborg, Jack, 17, stopped going to his adviser after four sessions.