ABSTRACT

A Practitioner’s Guide to Enhancing Parenting Skills: Assessment, Analysis and Intervention offers a detailed and stepwise approach to problem behaviour analysis and management, based on the successful and evidence-based Enhancing Parenting Skills Programme (EPaS). This unique programme, based on 40 years of Professor Hutchings’ clinical work, draws on social learning theory (SLT) principles designed to support families of young children with behavioural challenges.

In this book, Hutchings and Williams combine clear practical guidance with case examples and useful checklists to deliver SLT-based interventions tailored to the unique needs of individual families. The case analysis identifies the assets and skills in the home situation and the functions of problem behaviours before creating a set of achievable goals. The latter part of the manual includes examples of intervention strategies to address several common problems, including toileting, eating and night-time problems.

This book is an invaluable tool for all practitioners working in Early Years including CAMHS primary care staff, social workers, clinical psychologists, health visitors and school nurses.

part I|41 pages

Background

part II|125 pages

The EPaS programme

chapter 4|11 pages

Assessment session 1

Setting up an effective working relationship with parents

chapter 5|21 pages

Assessment session 1

Initial information gathering

chapter 6|10 pages

Assessment session 2

The typical day interview and parent record keeping

chapter 7|15 pages

Assessment session 3

Observing the parent–child interaction and other information sources

chapter 8|19 pages

Developing a case analysis

chapter 9|10 pages

Sample case analysis

chapter 10|21 pages

The intervention plan

chapter 11|8 pages

Teaching new behaviour

chapter 12|8 pages

Concluding the EPaS intervention

part III|28 pages

Typical problems

chapter 13|5 pages

A bedtime problem

chapter 14|4 pages

A morning problem

chapter 15|4 pages

A shopping trip

chapter 16|3 pages

A toileting problem

chapter 17|4 pages

An eating problem

chapter 18|6 pages

Avoidance and anxiety-based problems