
To read what some of our members have written about Re-ED Principles, a regular feature in the AREA News, a quarterly newsletter for the membership of our association, click on the highlighted principles.
Life is to be lived now, not in the past, and lived in the future only as a present challenge.
Competence makes a difference, and children and adolescents should be helped to be good at something, especially at schoolwork.
Self-control can be taught and children and adolescents helped to manage their behavior without the development of psychodymanic insight; and symptoms can a should be controlled by direct address, not necessarily by an uncovering therapy.
The cognitive competence of children and adolescents can be considerably enhanced; they can be taught generic skills in the management of their lives as well as strategies for coping with the complex array of demands placed upon them by family, school, community, or job; in other words, intelligence can be taught.
Feelings should be nurtured, shared spontaneously, controlled when necessary, expressed when too long repressed, and explored with trusted others.
The group is very important to young people, and it can be a major source of instruction in growing up.
In growing up, a child should know some joy in each day and look forward to some joyous event for the morrow.
Nicholas Hobbs, 1915-1983
More about the principles and practices of Re-ED can be found in The Troubled and Troubling Child, the last book written by Dr. Hobbs. The book is now available only through AREA, provided as a benefit for organization members. For Information about becoming an organizational or individual member of AREA please visit our membership page.