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    What Problems Can Be Solved Collaboratively?

    enNovember 22, 2010
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    About this Episode

    For the first half of this program, Dr. Greene focused on a common question: to what problems can Collaborative Problem Solving be productively applied? (Hint: it would be easier to identify the unsolved problems to which CPS can't be applied.) Then he focused on an email he received from a teacher trying hard to help his/her colleagues embrace the CPS model, and had some suggestions for how to move things forward.

    Recent Episodes from Dr. Ross Greene

    Helping Behaviorally Challenging Students

    Helping Behaviorally Challenging Students
    On the first Monday of every month at 3:30 pm Eastern time, from September through May, Dr. Ross Greene and four principals from schools in the U.S. and Canada cover a wide range of topics related to behaviorally challenging students and school discipline in general and Dr. Greene's Collaborative & Proactive Solutions (CPS) model in particular.  You can call into the program to get your questions answered or submit them via email here.  And, if you can't listen live, all the programs are archived in the Listening Library on the Lives in the Balance website or through i-Tunes.

    Help! This Student is Completely Out of Control!

    Help! This Student is Completely Out of Control!
    If a student is highly volatile, unstable, reactive, and unsafe, there are a few things to bear in mind: (1) s/he didn't get that way overnight; (2) there must be many expectations the student is having difficulty meeting; (3) reducing those expectations -- Plan C -- is a very good way to get things stabilized; and (4) even if takes a lot of time and energy to stabilize that student, it's a lot less time and energy than that student is consuming when s/he's unstable.