What if I can't identify a non-punitive consequence?

To properly view this site, javascript must be enabled and Flash version 9 or higher must be installed.
Get the latest Flash player
Julie Greenlee
MSW, For Children's Sake

Julie Greenlee, Certified Love & Logic Instructor.    Julie is currently Program Director at For Children’s Sake Emergency Diagnostic Center, a child placing agency specializing in therapeutic foster care, adoption, and residential treatment.  There she works with the most defiant children. She has received trainings on Childhood Differential Diagnoses, Reactive Attachment Disorder, Autism and Asbergers, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, Children and Families with HIV/AIDS, and has become a certified facilitator of Love and Logic which is the philosophy and core that For Children's Sake uses to teach both parents, staff, and community members, on appropriate and effective ways to parent and discipline a normal to extremely defiant child.

What if I can't identify a non-punitive consequence?

 

This series: 109,484 views

Other Videos

  • What is a protective factor with alcohol abuse?
  • One Minute Car Safety Seat Check for Your Child In this video, SafetyBeltSafe U.S.A. Executive Director Stephanie Tombrello explains how to select the appropriate safety seat for a toddler or small child, how to prevent injuries from air bags, how to install the safety seat correctly, and the safest location in the car for the child. She shows common types of car seat misuse and explains how to keep a fussy toddler buckled up. The final segments include a one-minute car safety check and additional safety tips for the whole family.
  • Halloween Child Safety Tips In this video, National Center for Missing & Exploited Children's Nancy McBride shares tips to keeping your child safe during Halloween.
  • What to do When People are Rude In this video P.M. Forni, the founder of The Civility Initiative at Johns Hopkins, gives essential information on how to deal with that daily and ubiquitous irritant that is rudeness. A quality of life issue, rudeness is best dealt with by trying to prevent it from coming your way. Professor Forni shows how to do that in the first part of the video. Since prevention is not always possible, however, it becomes crucial to prepare to respond to rudeness. The second part of the video shows how to respond to all sorts of acts of rudeness in the most civil and effective ways possible.
  • Preparing for the College Transition In this video, parenting expert and independent educational consultant, Wendie Lubic (The College Lady www.thecollegelady.net) walks parents through the college application process with a focus on reducing stress and working collaboratively with their teens. This video is designed for parents of high school students, and includes a variety of tips for staying organized, keeping the lines of communication open and enjoying the process of preparing their teen for the next step academically.
  • Child Safety on the Internet In this video series, Nancy McBride, the National Safety Director for the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children answers questions regarding personal child safety on topics ranging from the Internet, School safety, Holiday safety, and information about child identification. The Q&A provides helpful tips and tools for parents and guardians to help keep their children safer.