I have seen Randi declare this a woo theory, but I didn't have much evidence to go on. I am getting married in about 6 mo. or so, and after that I will probably be looking to start a family, so the subject of child rearing has become of interest to me. Being somewhat convinced that just because Randi, or anyone else, says it, doesn't mean it's right, I searched around a bit. First I ran into this link:
http://childparenting.about.com/cs/emotionalhealth/a/attachment_3.htm
Which describes the therapy as such:
Quote:
------------------
1. Communicate your love to your child in word and deed each and every day.
2. Listen for the feelings behind your child's verbal communication and respond to those feelings in an accepting way.
3. Show respect for your child's unique ideas and opinions.
4. Discuss mutual goals and plans with your child frequently. Go over the next day's schedule at bedtime. Make sure everyone knows where they will be going, what they will be doing, and what each person's responsibility will be.
5. Notify your child personally when plans change suddenly.
6. Continue to touch your child affectionately with hugs, pats on the back, sitting together to read, etc.
7. Model and teach courtesy, patience, kindness, thoughtfulness, honesty, loyalty, responsibility, fairness, and forgiveness.
8. Give your child age-appropriate responsibilities at home.
9. Recognize, acknowledge, and praise your child when he maks an effort to do something good -good school papers, obeying parents, helping at home.
10. Avoid destructive expressions of anger such as insulting, sarcasm, shaming, yelling, or spanking the child. Use Discipline with Dignity
----------------
End Quote
Seems ok to me, so far, but then I find this:
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread77028/pg1
Which paints a different picture, a rather dark and draconic one, at that.
Then I run across this link:
http://members.tripod.com/~radclass/slide01.html
POPUP ALERT, BTW. Anyway, this page seems to say that just about anything wrong with your child can be cured with AD Therapy. Hmmmm.....Sounds suspicious to me.
So, any opinions out there? I'm no psychologist, by any means, but if someone is a psychologist/psychiarist, I'm willing to listen.
http://childparenting.about.com/cs/emotionalhealth/a/attachment_3.htm
Which describes the therapy as such:
Quote:
------------------
1. Communicate your love to your child in word and deed each and every day.
2. Listen for the feelings behind your child's verbal communication and respond to those feelings in an accepting way.
3. Show respect for your child's unique ideas and opinions.
4. Discuss mutual goals and plans with your child frequently. Go over the next day's schedule at bedtime. Make sure everyone knows where they will be going, what they will be doing, and what each person's responsibility will be.
5. Notify your child personally when plans change suddenly.
6. Continue to touch your child affectionately with hugs, pats on the back, sitting together to read, etc.
7. Model and teach courtesy, patience, kindness, thoughtfulness, honesty, loyalty, responsibility, fairness, and forgiveness.
8. Give your child age-appropriate responsibilities at home.
9. Recognize, acknowledge, and praise your child when he maks an effort to do something good -good school papers, obeying parents, helping at home.
10. Avoid destructive expressions of anger such as insulting, sarcasm, shaming, yelling, or spanking the child. Use Discipline with Dignity
----------------
End Quote
Seems ok to me, so far, but then I find this:
http://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread77028/pg1
Which paints a different picture, a rather dark and draconic one, at that.
Then I run across this link:
http://members.tripod.com/~radclass/slide01.html
POPUP ALERT, BTW. Anyway, this page seems to say that just about anything wrong with your child can be cured with AD Therapy. Hmmmm.....Sounds suspicious to me.
So, any opinions out there? I'm no psychologist, by any means, but if someone is a psychologist/psychiarist, I'm willing to listen.