9 Essential Skills for the Love and Logic Classroom®
Ended Jun 8, 2017
24 credits
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Full course description
Course Details
Location: Oconee Academy, Room 127
Duration: 8:00 A.M. - 3:00 P.M.
Commitment: 4 Full Days
Course Type: Professional Development
Target Audience: Teachers, Administrators, Guidance Counselors, Media Specialists, and any other adult working in contact with students, including Custodians, Food Service, etc.
Requirement: Participants must pay $10 for Love and Logic workbook
Recertification Credit: 24 credits
Stipend: $400
Materials Needed: Workbook
Instructor
Miriam S. Johnson, EdD, ThD, NBCT
*Independent facilitator of 9 Essential Skills for the Love and Logic Classroom® and Parenting the Love and Logic Way®
*28 years experience in both rural and urban classrooms
*EdD K12 Supervision and Administration with concentration on Classroom Management
*ThD Conflict Management with concentration on Classroom Management
Description
If you like to laugh while learning effective skills you can use the very same day, a Love and Logic class is just what the doctor ordered!
Since research tells us that people learn best while having fun, our presenters blend story-telling and humor with highly effective solutions to the challenges facing today’s parents, educators and other professionals.
You won’t just get theory.
You won’t hear the same old psychobabble.
You won’t find yourself falling asleep.
You’ll hear lasting solutions specific enough that you’ll have the words to say when facing real situations with your kids or your students.
This course gives an overview of the 9 Essential Skills of the Love and Logic Classroom® through examples, interaction, and real life stories. Easy to learn, easy to use, these techniques are principles-based; therefore, each individual can tailor them to fit an array of difficult situations.
Course Outline
Experience lower stress levels
Neutralize arguing with the Brain Dead technique
Lock-in sadness or empathy before delivering consequences
Set limits with enforceable statements
Share control through lots of small choices
Build relationships with the One Sentence Intervention
Utilize the Anticipatory Consequence

