2004
DOI: 10.1080/02630672.2004.9689636
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Response to Review of ‘Communicating with Children & Adolescents: Actions for Change”

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The 2012 National Standards for the Protection and Welfare of Children ( Health Information and Quality Authority, 2012 ) recommends that child-centred services communicate with children and families in a manner appropriate to their age, stage of development and communicative needs when ensuring the best interests of children. The following quotation by Bannister and Huntington to describe child-centred engagement with children fits best with ethos of this study: Following, rather than always thinking we can or should lead; actively listening rather than always talking; engaging with children on their terms not just ours; being respectful of what they can do rather than largely focusing on what they cannot do (applying the deficit model of child development); or bringing our creativity and knowledge to the interactions we have with them, are all examples of routes to child-centred interactions ( Bannister and Huntington, 2002 , p. 12). …”
Section: Reason For the Studymentioning
confidence: 53%
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“…The 2012 National Standards for the Protection and Welfare of Children ( Health Information and Quality Authority, 2012 ) recommends that child-centred services communicate with children and families in a manner appropriate to their age, stage of development and communicative needs when ensuring the best interests of children. The following quotation by Bannister and Huntington to describe child-centred engagement with children fits best with ethos of this study: Following, rather than always thinking we can or should lead; actively listening rather than always talking; engaging with children on their terms not just ours; being respectful of what they can do rather than largely focusing on what they cannot do (applying the deficit model of child development); or bringing our creativity and knowledge to the interactions we have with them, are all examples of routes to child-centred interactions ( Bannister and Huntington, 2002 , p. 12). …”
Section: Reason For the Studymentioning
confidence: 53%
“…Following, rather than always thinking we can or should lead; actively listening rather than always talking; engaging with children on their terms not just ours; being respectful of what they can do rather than largely focusing on what they cannot do (applying the deficit model of child development); or bringing our creativity and knowledge to the interactions we have with them, are all examples of routes to child-centred interactions ( Bannister and Huntington, 2002 , p. 12).…”
Section: Reason For the Studymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…En los primeros momentos de la vida un niño no solo no puede expresar sus necesidades sino que tampoco puede reconocerlas (Bannister, 2002). Se parte de una sensación global de bienestar o de malestar, y un otro adulto, a ser posible buen lector de necesidades afectivas, ejercita la función de traducción, pone nombre, organiza y cubre las necesidades apenas esbozadas en el gesto, en el llanto, o en la sonrisa.…”
Section: El Dobleunclassified
“…It is considered to be of particular relevance as an intervention with young people (Emunah, ). Research on dramatherapy with adolescents has been widespread (Jennings and Gersie, ; Emunah, , ; Bannister, ; Bannister and Huntington, ) and it has been noted that dramatherapy can be considered the ‘primary treatment of choice for the resistant adolescent’ (Emunah, , p. 120). This can include making use of the adolescent's ‘healthy rebelliousness … within the context of the dramatic activity, thereby bypassing or minimizing the resistance to treatment’ (Emunah, , p. 119).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%