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COOPERATIVE PARENTING Building a Bridge Dr. Jeanne Brooks jdbrooks6@liberty.edu
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THREE STYLES OF POST DIVORCE PARENTING Conflicted Disengaged Cooperative
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WHAT RESEARCH SAYS Research indicates high conflict can lead to PTSD type symptoms in children Research indicates on going conflict can affect child’s development. Research indicates cooperative parenting renders positive change in how the parents interact. Research indicates children adjust best when parents are cooperative with each other
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CONFLICTED PARENTS (STAHL, 2012) Ongoing hostility Different parental approaches Strong opinions of the other parent Openly expressed concerns about the adequacy of the other parent Use of the court to solve child custody issues Ongoing opinion as to the other’s lifestyle Personality factors of one or both parents factoring in the conflict
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PARENTING COORDINATION VS. COOPERATIVE PARENTING Parenting Coordinator – polices the parents interaction with each other, visitations, and activities. Parenting Coordinator – helps the Court address custody related issues Cooperative Parenting – teaches parents how to parent together Cooperative Parenting - builds bridges
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GOALS OF COOPERATIVE PARENTING COUNSELING Tearing down the walls and building a bridge
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DISENGAGED PARENTING; DISARMING THE PARENTS (STAHL, 2012) Parents have little or no contact with each other “If you don’t have anything nice to say, say nothing at all” approach Avoiding contact helps avoid conflict First step from conflict to reduce more damage and offer an ability to heal Stahl, P. M., Cooperative Parenting and Parallel Parenting. www.parentingafterdivorce.com (September, 2012).www.parentingafterdivorce.com
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PARALLEL PARENTING (STAHL, 2012 Parents begin parenting the child/ren while no longer engaging in attacks to the other parent Both parents are actively involved in the children’s activities, school, appointments Little to no contact with the other parent but active parenting activities apart from the other parent Stahl, P. M., Cooperative Parenting and Parallel Parenting. www.parentingafterdivorce.com (September, 2012)www.parentingafterdivorce.com
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BUILDING A FOUNDATION Counselor helps parents begin to find a common ground, love for their children Counselor help parents find a place of agreement, wanting what is best for their children Counselor helps parents find common areas of agreement to goals for child/ren Counselor helps parents find common ideas of how to assist child to reaching these goals
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BUILDING A BRIDGE Counselor establishes fair fighting rules Counselor acts as a mediator Counselor teaches listening skills Counselor teaches communication skills Counselor helps identify triggers Counselor teaches healthy conflict resolution Counselor always reminds them of home base Counselor educates the importance of forgiveness
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BUILDING A BRIDGE CON’T Counselor educates on best interest Counselor gets feedback from the child/ren Counselor helps communicate child/erns needs Counselor reminds them of home base Counselor encourages, supports, epathises Counselor stays neutral yet focused on best interest
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