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<item> 
<title>Most of What You Know About Violent Students is Wrong, Includes Free Online Class on
 School Safety
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
Today, another major education outlet printed yet another misguided article that urged teachers to build stronger relationships with their most severely misbehaved students. The author asserted that relationship-building is the best way to reduce violence, bullying, online teacher class cyberbullying, disrespect, defiance, property damage, and harm to others. That assertion isn't just wrong, it's dangerous. 
 </description> 
    <pubDate>Fri, 23 Mar 2012 01:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/children.html#1304</guid> 
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<item> 
<title>In This Teacher Professional Development Blog Issue:
Dynamic, Do-Now Devices to Deter Dropouts
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
In this issue, we've got some real eye-opening devices you can
 use right now to deter dropping out. I'm Ruth Herman Wells, M.S.,
 the Director and Trainer for Youth Change Workshops. 
These dynamic strategies are taken from my live, online, 
and on-site training workshops, as well as from my Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel Troubled Youth books (click) and posters.
 </description> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 08 Feb 2012 03:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/children.html#1303</guid> 
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<item> 
<title>In This Teacher Professional Development Blog Issue:
The Best Apathy-BustersTurnaround Bad Attitudes
With These Innovative Interventions 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
A Teacher Professional Development Primer: 
If you are seeing more and more apathetic and negative students, you will love the use-now strategies included in this issue. These innovative, attention-grabbing methods are especially designed to work when conventional approaches fail, and were developed to turnaround even the most negative, entrenched child or teen. 
 </description> 
    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Jan 2012 03:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/children.html#1302</guid> 
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<item> 
<title>In This Professional Development Blog Issue:
The More You Learn
The More You Earn
Motivational Methods That Teach
Diplomas Deliver Dollars 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
A Teacher Professional Development Primer: 
In our down economy, it's now more true than ever: The more you learn, the more you earn. Your students need to know that now, rather than live out the reality of life in a rough economy without that magic piece of paper. More than ever before, a diploma is ticket of admission to this new millennium.
 </description> 
    <pubDate>Wed, 28 Sep 2011 08:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/teaching.html#1301</guid> 
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<item> 
<title>In This Blog Issue: Bring Order to 
Behavior Disorders, Insider Secrets for 
Controlling Uncontrollable Students 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
Some students' behavior goes beyond just being extremely misbehaved. Some students actually have mental health disorders. Counselor training includes extensive preparation to manage each type of behavior disorder. That is why counselors can sometimes more successfully manage youngsters that educators struggle to control. Most counselors learn specialized behavior management tools tailored for each type of acting-out disorder. Most of these targeted tools work really well for educators too-- except that educators are not normally routinely offered this essential training. 
 </description> 
    <pubDate>Tue, 31 May 2011 08:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/teaching.html#1209</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
 
 
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<title> 
Human Pressure Cookers: If Anguish Turns Violent, Do You Know What to Do? 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
In this Classroom Management blog issue: In 2005, annual state-wide testing in  
Texas included an essay section. Of the one million essays submitted, 
 nearly 700 youngsters wrote about their own abuse, neglect or rape  
(USA Today, March 28, 2005). Around the same time, The New York 
 Times suggested that a recent Minnesota school shooting may 
 have occurred because "anguish turned homicidal."  
In the at risk students keynote speaker next sentence,  
they wrote: "Teachers are ill-prepared to identify  
and address the normal emotional difficulties of their  
students, much less the aberrational ones." 
 
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 21 Apr 2011 08:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/teaching.html#1208</guid> 
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<item> 
<title> 
School Skills Training 101 How to Be a Student,  
The Most Important ClassThat Schools Never Offer 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
In this blog issue: There could almost be a sign hanging on the front door of your school:  
"Students Wanted: No Training Provided." I'm Youth Change Workshop's Director, Ruth Herman Wells.  
As a staff trainer who has led professional development workshops in every corner of North America,  
I have to say that very few school districts have a formal plan to train kids to  
 become successful students. Years ago, parents routinely taught their offspring to look, act, and sound like students.  
Now, many families can't or won't give their children the motivation, attitudes, and specific School Skills they need to  
succeed in school. For all the research, fads, opinions, debates, and testing, this is the elephant in the classroom-- that  
School Behavior Skills are universally expected but seldom taught. It doesn't take years of research to determine that it is  
probably completely unrealistic to expect children to perform tasks they've never been taught.  
 
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 07 Apr 2011 08:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/teaching.html#1207</guid> 
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<item> 
<title> 
Teaching in Times of Crisis: What Every Educator Needs to Know 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
News and graphic images of the recent disasters in Japan are everywhere right now. 
 While some of your students are unaffected by the tragedy, a portion 
 of your youngsters are at high risk to deteriorate emotionally, socially, 
 and academically-- even when the crises are occurring a world away. 
 If you're an educator, it's critical  
 to successful classroom management and instruction, that you know which of your students 
 are at risk, and what you should do to prevent, moderate, and manage these concerns.  
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Tue, 15 Mar 2011 08:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/teaching.html#1206</guid> 
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<title> 
The Very Best Interventions for the Very Worst Classroom Management Behavior Problems 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
Everyone at Youth Change Workshops is so excited that in January, 2011, our Director, Ruth Herman Wells was rated by SpeakerWiki as the #3 Elementary Education Speaker and #7 High School Ed Speaker in the U.S. She was also rated #8 of all Education Administrator Speakers. Ruth is known not just for her emotional, captivating speaking, but for her one-of-a-kind, unexpected behavior management interventions to turnaround troubled youth and children. Here are some of Ruth's most popular, enduring, and effective classroom management interventions for students' bad behavior and attitude in school.  
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Tue, 15 Feb 2011 08:00:00 PST </pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/teaching.html#1205</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Classroom Management Strategies Blog with Amazingly Effective, Unexpected Free Worksheet and Lesson for Girls 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
This issue of our classroom management blog has some terrific resources for problem girls. 
In tough economic times, girls tend to take the brunt of service reductions. 
 In all classes of services, girls receive fewer services, less intense services, for less time,  
and they're served later in life than their male counterparts. There is no indication that  
girls have fewer problems than boys; all indicators suggest they may have more. So, 
 in today's difficult economic times, where services for young females are very limited, it is imperative 
 that everyone who works with youth, have gender-proficient strategies for girls.  
One-gender-fits-all strategies  
fit no one, so here are some gender-proficient strategies crafted especially for girls.  
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 20 Jan 2011 08:00:00 PST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/teaching.html#1204</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Fix the Nix-Master to Say "Yes" Faster-- With Free Lesson Plan and Worksheet to Stop Defiance and Power Struggles 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
 
 Do you know a Nix-Master? Sure you do. It's the child who says no to nearly anything.  
Some of these children are loud and defiant, others are quietly and politely non-compliant. 
 Whether they're loud or quiet, they're not doing what they're asked to do. 
No adult ever won a power struggle with a child, and no adult ever will. 
 The minute you get into a power struggle with a child, you've already lost. 
 Instead, choose interventions that work around the resistance. 
 Nearly nonstop nay-saying is a normal part of development that prepares teens  
to become independent. Here are techniques to use with youth or children who  
evidence normal non-compliance, and those who use behaviors that go well 
 beyond typical into seriously defiant.  
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Tue, 07 Dec 2010 08:00:00 PST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/racetotop.html#1203</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Next Generation Classroom Management Tools, With 3 Ready-to-Use Worksheets 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
 
 Amazingly, most school districts have carefully crafted,  
elaborate plans for teaching academic content, but no curriculum  
at all to teach the foundation School Skills that youngsters need to 
 fully take advantage of academic offerings. 
 School Skills Training should include teaching students to be motivated,  
appropriately dressed, how to interact with other students, how to ride the bus,  
behave in the hallways, and also how to complete assignments,  
attend every school day, and have acceptable teacher interaction skills.  
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Tue, 14 Sep 2010 08:00:00 PST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/racetotop.html#1202</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Stop Classroom Management Problems Before They Start, Includes Free Posters and Worksheets 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
 
School Skills Training. It could change your life, and the lives of your students. School Skills Training means that you teach your youngsters how to be students, just like you teach your youngsters academic subject matter. 
Your school district has a carefully planned curriculum for teaching academic content, but no curriculum at all to teach the foundation School Skills that youngsters need to take advantage of the academic offerings. 
 
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Tue, 17 Aug 2010 08:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/racetotop.html#1201</guid> 
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<item> 
<title> 
Stop Cyber-Bullying and Self-Harm: Cyber Smarts for the Facebook Generation 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
In this issue, you will be seeing cutting-edge, never-seen-before, powerful new tools for the Facebook generation. They are designed to reduce the cyber-bullying, and self-harm your students may be involved in on internet social network sites. Just like the saying, "What happens in Vegas, stays in Vegas," "What happens on the internet stays on the internet," potentially forever. Help your students avoid being haunted forever by indiscretions, vulnerabilities, or misbehavior that they exposed to the world when they where just thirteen or fifteen or seventeen.  
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 13 May 2010 08:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/racetotop.html#9910</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
How to Help Bullied, Potentially Suicidal Students With Free Printable Worksheets 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
It's been the top story in the news: bullied students committing suicide because they can't cope with the bullying. Even veteran counselors and social workers worry they might not always notice every student who is so distressed that they might engage in serious self-harm, but the reality is that the front line of "first responders" is actually made up of educators, who may not have even have mental health expertise. Further, many educators may have dozens and dozens of students they see each day. That glimpse into a young person's world may not be enough for a teacher to become aware that a student is in serious emotional distress. 
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2010 18:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/racetotop.html#999</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Your Classroom Management Fix It Kit with 6 Free Lesson Plans and Printable Worksheets 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
We always stress in our workshops that teachers should never assume that their class participants have any idea how to look, act, or sound like students, that teachers may need to teach that before expecting it. That's right. You need to transform kids into students before you are going to get the kind of behavior you need in your classroom. We call this notion School Skills Training. School Skills Training techniques take untrained, unmotivated, uncooperative kids and helps them become skilled, motivated, cooperative students. 
 </description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 04 Mar 2010 14:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/racetotop.html#998</guid> 
</item> 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Extra-Strength Attitude-Adjuster Techniques That Inspire and Transform Students 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
Doesn't it frustrate you when students spend class time in the bathroom? Here is an unexpected attitude adjuster technique to improve that reality. This technique is so unusual, it may catch students off-balance, and accomplish more than conventional approaches ever could. Post this device on the wall.  
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 04 Feb 2010 14:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/racetotop.html#997</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Innovative Techniques and Worksheets to Win the Race to the Top 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
Here is the most overlooked solution to win education's "race to the top": Train kids to be successful students. Kids are not born instant students, magically knowing what to wear to school, how to interact with teachers, work hard, arrive on time, and be motivated. Years ago, parents taught all that, but many families don't reliably prepare students in that manner any more. That means that many teachers are working with untrained, unmotivated, uninterested students, who act untrained, unmotivated, and uninterested. 
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 07 Jan 2010 14:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/racetotop.html#996</guid> 
</item> 
 
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<title> 
Motivate Wannabe Sports Stars to Stay and Work in School With 2 Free Printable Worksheets 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
Many wannabe sports stars truly believe they will never need school or education. They're so certain that they're going to be pro athletes, not much reaches them to convince them otherwise. For years, teachers and others have asked us for interventions that might convince these students that they'll still need school and an education-- whether they become sports stars or not. Here is a brand new device that you can use verbally, or if you grab the intervention from our Facebook page, you can print it as a worksheet or poster. 
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 19 Nov 2009 14:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#9911</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Inspirational Apathy-Busters That Inspire Students to Aspire 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
Get this inspirational worksheet free. It can be tough to inspire students who  
are self-destructive but this creative intervention can be a good start. You can use this device verbally; 
it can quickly start a productive discussion. You could also enlarge the worksheet into a poster. 
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Tue, 27 Oct 2009 17:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#10</guid> 
</item> 
 
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<title> 
No-Fee Workshop and Worksheet Plus Giga-Smart in Wired World Strategies for Students 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
As our world goes more and more high tech, your students need to be ready. 
 There are a lot of fantastic strategies in this issue,  
and all of them help prepare youngsters to live in a wired, wired world.  
Get This Worksheet Free...  
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Thu, 1 Oct 2009 09:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#9</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
You've Never Seen Motivators Like This Before Plus Free Videos and Worksheet 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
This issue is filled with brand new interventions that you-- our blog subscribers-- are seeing before almost everyone else. Even better, we're giving you a wonderful motivational student printable worksheet when you sign up to follow Youth Change on Twitter.  Plus, we have new video tutorials to help you solve student motivation problems before they start-- and it's all in this issue. 
 
It Slices! It Dices! It Graduates!  
This intervention can be used in dozens of ways. It's a play on the type of glib, hard-to-forget slogans you hear in informercials. It's a big hit at our workshops. Our inservice will be in Portland, Oregon on October 8-9, 2009 so you can get more strategies like this one at that conference.  
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Wed, 09 Sep 2009 20:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#8</guid> 
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<title> 
Back-to-School Classroom Management Strategies That Rule 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
It's back-to-school time. This issue is filled with terrific back-to-school interventions to stop classroom management problems before they start. Plus, to celebrate the new school year, we're giving you 2 back-to-school worksheets when you sign up to follow Youth Change on Twitter.  
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Tue, 21 Jul 2009 15:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#7</guid> 
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<item> 
<title> 
What You Need to Know About Bullying 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
In our professional development workshops, we always ask participants to identify the top cause of school shootings. Bullying is usually named. There is no doubt that bullying is a huge problem in nearly any setting where children and youth congregate, but you won't be able to stop or moderate bullying by focusing on that issue alone. 
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Fri, 29 May 2009 08:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#6</guid> 
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<title> 
Escape the Hormone Zone-- Social Skills Intervention Strategies 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#5</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
It's Spring. That means you may work in The Hormone Zone. Let us help you find a way out. If it is challenging trying to teach and counsel "hormone-poisoned" youth, here are some absolutely terrific interventions to help your teens use their heads instead of their hormones. This blog issue has student social skills strategies and interventions that can  
 save your classroom. 
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2009 08:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#5</guid> 
</item> 
 
 
<item> 
<title> 
Free Workshop, Book and Classroom Management Worksheet 
to Cheer You Up 
in a Down Economy 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#4</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
3   F R E E 
REGISTRATIONS 
for SEATTLE BREAKTHROUGH WORKSHOP 
We are giving away three $169 registrations to our Seattle Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel Youth Workshop on May 7-8, 2009. Since this magazine is mailed all over the world and not just to the Washington State region, you may have an extremely good chance of winning if you live near Seattle, or can find a way to get there. To get this no-fee workshop slot,  
</description> 
                    <pubDate>Mon, 20 Apr 2009 08:00:00 EST</pubDate> 
<guid>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#4</guid> 
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<title> 
 Pop Quiz-- Are You Using Yesterday's Training with Today's Students? 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#3</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
The Obama administration has already begun questioning whether contemporary teacher professional development training sufficiently prepares teachers to best educate contemporary students. As one of the nation's premier providers of innovative teacher professional development, we share that concern. At our workshops, teachers often express concern that their training did not adequately prepare them to win the race for the top.  
</description> 
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<title> 
The 3 Worst Mistakes Good Youth Professionals Make 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/education.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
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Here are the 3 Worst Mistakes Good Youth Professionals Make. Since Youth Change is your Problem Student Problem-Solver, of course, we supply solutions you can use right away. 
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Work Refusers Remedies That Work 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/curriculum.html#1</link> 
 
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Our  Live Expert Help Line gets more requests for help with this child than almost any other. Every teacher, every counselor, every social worker, every principal knows students who won't do their work. Some of these work refusers often fail to show up. When they do show up, they often say little, and some may be nearly mute. Some may not even make eye contact, or even look in your direction.  
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Depressed Students. Do You Know What to Do 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#12</link> 
 
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This is a rough time for many families. That is why this issue will focus on ideas for helping children who are sad and depressed. Since depression often worsens around holiday time, it is always a good idea to be especially vigilant during November and December. Be sure to carefully watch over any children and teens who show signs of sadness, isolation, withdrawal, distress, or other marked changes in behavior. If you are not a counselor, be sure to seek help if you have any safety concerns about a child or teen; these strategies are not a substitute for that. On a happier note, be sure to grab one of the 5 FREE workshop guest passes  worth $169 each, that we are giving out for our approaching 20th birthday. We gave out five slots in the last issue and have five more to give away now. It's fast and easy to get a completely free workshop slot so click here for details. 
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Problem Student Classroom Management Blog 
Fantastic Freebies and Funding Finds 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#11</link> 
 
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We are about to begin our 20th year. To celebrate our birthday, and thank you for your support, we are packing this issue with freebies, funding ideas, and other goodies to help you get through the year even if you don't have a very good budget. If you have all the usual student behavior problems but half the budget, this issue has help for both. 
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Bad Budget and Bad Behavior. Free and Low-Cost Handouts, Podcasts, More 
 in the Problem Student Problem-Solver Blog 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#10</link> 
 
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Remember when your biggest problem was your students' bad behavior? Now, you and your site may also have bad budget problems as well. Those budget constraints can really limit your access to solutions that could minimize or even stop the behavior problems that can dominate your site. In good times and not-so-good times, Youth Change is here to help.  
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Dont Freak Its Back to School Week   
Lively Methods to Help You Survive 
Your End of Summer Bummer 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#9</link> 
 
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In between trekking from school to school, conference to conference, and agency to agency all summer, teaching our popular Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel Troubled Youth Workshop, we've been busy producing knock-your-socks-off, new handouts and posters. Some of these brand new handouts and posters are so new that they aren't even for sale yet on our website, but as a subscriber to this internet magazine, you can have some of these attention-grabbing worksheets now, for free.  
 
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Back-to-School Success in 5 Fast and Simple Steps 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#8</link> 
 
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If teachers face greater challenges than ever before, at a time when they are equipped with less resources than ever before, then it becomes crucial to fully use and mine every second of instruction time. However, the typical teacher loses about 22 minutes of every 50 minutes of instruction time to on-demand behavior management. That is time no contemporary teacher can afford to lose. Here are five of our innovative, one-of-a-kind methods to help you create your most productive school year ever even though you may face bigger hurdles than ever before. 
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 Our Most Requested Strategies-- 
     Your Most Beloved Interventions  
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#7</link> 
 
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Our Spring '08 workshops were really packed with participants so we read a lot of evaluations. Many of the evaluations from the Spring inservice tour included requests for us to post favorite interventions. We noticed that many workshop participants requested the same handful of interventions. By popular request, we are posting your favorite interventions right here. 
 
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Oh Wow! Motivation-Makers with Free Handouts 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#6</link> 
 
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Breaking News! All Jobs Now Require a Diploma! 
 
This intervention is so surprising that even your co-workers  
may react with shock. It is such a potent device that it won't just jar your students. It 
 may grab the attention of anyone who sees it, even adults. As you can see from  
the picture at left, the poster proclaims that "All jobs now require a diploma." 
 The small text at the bottom says "Think this poster is scary? Try life without a diploma." 
 The text at the bottom may be small but it may also be haunting. This intervention 
 works as both a handout or wall poster, plus you could use this device verbally. 
 
 
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Our Most Creative Interventions Ever, 
2 Free Resources Included 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#5</link> 
 
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Some of our best ideas aren't really our ideas. The first couple of interventions in this issue were inspired by Dr. Matthew Meyers from LAUSD. By the way, if you are planning on catching our L.A. workshop on April 17-18, it is so full, we had to change venues. The workshop is now being held at the Radisson LAX. Click here for details.  If you still haven't signed up, you should contact us as soon as you can. 
 
Shaquille on Line 1 
 
This is such a great idea. This strategy is one of the terrific ideas suggested by Matthew from LAUSD. Staff at his site are working to create celebrity wake-up calls for students. It fits L.A. perfectly and you can easily make it fit your part of the world. Get local or national celebrities to record wake-up calls for your students and start their day with a bang. No one sleeps through a call from a big name star. Their eyes will be wide open.  
 
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Surprising, No-Fail New Strategies 
Free Worksheet Plus Workshop Slots 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#4</link> 
 
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Have you ever noticed that most interventions are geared for boys, or are generic, one-gender-fits-all interventions. This intervention worksheet is intended just for girls, although you can use it with boys if you wish. This provocative handout is the perfect conversation-starter for girls' counseling groups, health classes, contemporary issues classes, and living skills courses. It also works well with individual students. It tackles a tough problem area: body image. It also raises issues of weight, self-image, beauty, culture and societal expectations of girls. This handout will start important conversations and provoke insights when mere words and generic methods can't. 
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3 Steps to Better Discipline Includes Free Worksheet 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#3</link> 
 
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 Here is the surprising truth about discipline: Discipline and consequences are often ineffective. Yes, every school or agency needs both, but alone, they don't work. Alone? Yes, if you have a discipline and consequence structure set up, but have not first taught your students the skills, motivation and attitudes that they need to perform the desired behaviors, you will almost certainly find your discipline is ineffective. 
 
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School Isn't Just for Dating Anymore  
Interventions to Prevent Public Displays of Affection 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#2</link> 
 
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style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
 
If your students believe that your site exists just for dating purposes, we have some delightfully different, unusually effective interventions that you may want to use right away. You can even get a couple of free innovative handouts 
 from us that you can print and use with students. If you are tired of the constant public displays of affection that don't belong in a school or agency setting, our new interventions can help. Because these new methods rely heavily on 
 humor, they may work much better than conventional interventions.  
 
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Fix Your Broken School Year 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/special.html#1</link> 
 
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Many of you continue to emphasize that your classroom and school have become seriously out-of-control. 
To start off the new year, it only makes sense to give our top tips to repair serious problems at your school or agency. 
Here are our initial suggestions for what to do to salvage a school year that has been unusually difficult or dangerous. 
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What You Don't Know About Violent Youth Can Hurt You 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#1019</link> 
 
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<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
 
 Before you read some of our best aggression control strategies, workshop registration click here to enter your name to get one of the 5 completely free Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel Troubled Youth Workshop registrations that we are giving away to subscribers. You can choose to attend free this fall in St. Louis, Austin, or Phoenix. It's our way of thanking you for being so loyal to Youth Change. We had a full house at our Portland workshop this past week. Thank-you. It takes just a few clicks to enter. The winners will be randomly selected. Your odds of winning are actually pretty high because our subscribers are located all over the world, not necessarily near any of our upcoming workshop cities.  If you live near a workshop stop, or can travel to one, you have a good chance of winning a free $169 workshop slot if you enter; start here.  If you prefer to just register now, but are on a budget, we have at least one Half-Price Work-Study slot open for $84 still available in each city. Email (click here), or call 1-800-545-5736 to grab a Half-Price slot before they are taken. 
 
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Got Bullies and Victims? You Need Our Gropes-Busters 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#peer</link> 
 
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 Peer interaction problems can make any school or agency site chaotic, loud, unpleasant or unsafe. You've got an array of peer problems, from bullying to verbal abuse, from scapegoating to cliques and harassment. There are no quick fixes to instantly turnaround all your peer problems, but in this issue, you will find a very fun, ready-to-use, complete intervention to begin the process. 
 
The more you can use creative, unexpected and humorous methods, the more success you may achieve repairing poor peer skills. Rely on methods that catch your bullying, aggressive, resistant, oppositional, depressed, withdrawn, and defiant youth off-guard, then powerfully engage them in learning despite themselves. The intervention below offers these benefits. This dynamic strategy is taken from the hundreds we give in our live and recorded workshops. (Click here for details on upcoming live seminars). Did you notice that we are giving our subscribers 5 free slots for the workshops coming soon to St. Louis, Austin and Phoenix? Click here for details on how you can quickly snag a free workshop slot. 
 
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<title> 
Stop Yelling at Students. No-Scream Classroom and Group Management Strategies 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#scream</link> 
 
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In our workshops, in our email, and on the phone, we have been hearing the same complaint over and over and over. I can't scream loud enough and long enough to control my class. In the nearly 20 years that Youth Change has been a national resource for teachers and counselors with troubled students, we have never been so inundated with inquiries about how to scream louder and longer to get back in control. 
 
What would you think if your son or daughter's teacher managed by screaming? You would be appalled and demand the screaming stop. If you are one of the professionals who is screaming at kids, you need to remember that you are screaming at someone's son, someone's daughter. If you wouldn't want your offspring to be yelled at, then you shouldn't be yelling at someone else's children. 
 
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Our Best-Ever Most Effective New Strategies  
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#yell</link> 
 
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We've been hard at work devising attention-grabbing, unexpected strategies for all the kid problems you deal with. Most of these decidedly different, potent, new methods have been turned into posters. We've actually added a whopping 100 new posters. If you are planning on coming to one of our Fall 2007 workshops in Portland, St. Louis, Austin, or Phoenix, you can count on these lively, unorthodox ideas being included in the 200 strategies we give in each inservice. By the way, we even still have some of our half-price work study slots open for these workshops, so call 1-800-545-5736 now if you want to grab one. But, you don't have to wait for our workshop dates to arrive. Some of our provocative, new interventions are right here in this newsletter, and ready for our subscribers to use today. 
 
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Behavior and Attitude Problems Solved Here 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#teaching</link> 
 
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style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
 
Got Kid Problems? Our web site can help. And, it can help better than ever before because it is now twice as big. Even better, most of these state-of-the-art, attention-grabbing, more effective resources are still free to use. 
 
Chances are that your solution is just a few clicks away-- if only you knew where to look. That's what this issue is all about. This is your resource guide to some of the newest and best resources to turnaround problems like poor motivation, classroom management concerns, violence, bad behavior, work refusal, and much more. 
 
Teaching and counseling troubled youth and children is hard, but our new web site resources can make it easier. We're standing right next to you in your classroom or office, and we're ready to help.  
 
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<title> 
Does Back to School 
Mean Back to Problems? 
 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#techniques</link> 
 
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How bad has it gotten for teachers? Students are now referring their beleaguered teachers to our web site for help. Here is just one of the recent referrals that arrived at the end of the 2007 school year, and definitely grabbed our attention. 
 
Mr. Alan, I am sending you this because of all those troubled kids in the class. I hope it will help you, 
at least next year. 
--Katie M. 
 
This new school year just doesn't have to be as tough as it was this past year. Remember when you used to love teaching, when you felt so privileged to shape the lives of students? That feeling may have been lost many semesters ago. 
 
If you are facing the start of the new school year with dread, we can help. Most teacher training is dominated by content, testing and theory. Most teacher training doesn't actually show teachers how to manage the huge coping, social, and behavior problems that come in each day with students. Contemporary teachers need to know how to actually train kids to be prepared students who have all the school, coping, and social skills needed to function in a school setting.  
 
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<title> 
Why Do Some Students Become Violent? 
The Answer Can Prevent a Tragedy 
 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#aggression</link> 
 
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We were on a collision course with disaster. 
 
That phrase has started showing up a lot on our workshop evaluations lately.  
That phrase is also being used a lot by participants during workshop sessions.  
The recent school shooting seems to have crystallized many school staff's  
concern that their site could face a tragedy. 
 
Educators are offered so little basic mental health training to help them understand  
deeply troubled students. When a school shooter does not fit the profile of a consistently 
 aggressive, acting-out student, it can seem confusing. In the recent incident, the shooter  
did not fit that classic profile of someone who was routinely assaultive, bullying, or  
verbally abusive. Nor was this student someone who was being constantly bullied or 
 tormented, another stereotype of shooters often offered in the media. Human beings  
are more complex than either of these two options. Educators are often more  
accustomed to preventing and addressing violence from acting-out youth, and  
may feel far less prepared to prevent or address violence from other types of youth.  
We have gotten quite a few calls and emails asking for help. 
 
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De-Stressing High Stress Testing-- 
 
Can Force-Fed Education Work? 
 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#stress</link> 
 
<description> 
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style="border-width:0px;width:1px;height:1px"/>]]> 
 You probably won't be surprised to learn that one of the hottest topics in our 
 Problem-Student Problem-Solver Workshop staff development sessions  
is serious concern about the damage caused by high stakes, high stress testing generated by No Child Left Behind.  
In many states, as part of the assessment, students write essays. One student in our area 
 wrote his essay about his return to middle school. He'd dropped out due to heartbreaking problems  
he'd been experiencing at home with his family. 
 The essay was judged unsatisfactory when evaluated for grammar and punctuation.  
High stakes test essays on subject matter such as family problems, abuse, 
 and sadness have become so common that they now have their own name. They are called Cry for Help essays. 
 
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<title> 
 
Our Best Nopes-Busters and Compliance-Makers--  
Powerful Ways to Avoid Power Struggles 
 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#compliant</link> 
 
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 Do you know a Nix-Master? Sure you do. It's the child who says  
no to nearly anything. Some of these children are loud and defiant,  
others are quietly and politely non-compliant.  
Whether they are loud or quiet, they are not doing what they are asked to do. 
 No adult ever won a power struggle with a child, and no adult ever will. 
 The minute you get into power struggle with a child, you've already lost. 
 Instead, choose interventions that work around the resistance. 
Here are techniques to use with youth or children who evidence normal non-compliance, 
 and those who use behaviors that go well beyond typical into seriously defiant. 
 We hope you enjoy this sampling of our innovative methods to fix the nix-master to say yes faster. 
 
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<title> 
 
Remedies That Work with Work Refusers-- 
 Anxiety-Relievers to Use 
That No Student Can Refuse 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#anxiety</link> 
 
<description> 
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style="border-width:0px;width:1px;height:1px"/>]]> 
 At our past few Problem-Kid Problem-Solver Workshops, there has been a lot of interest in 
 methods to help work refusers. You may or may not recognize that term, but all teachers 
 and youth professionals have at least several children who refuse assigned tasks. Teachers  
may have students who routinely refuse all school work. Some students may also refuse to talk  
or make eye contact. In our workshop, we spend hour after hour on work refusers. During that time,  
we place a major focus on anxious children and youth. Anxiety can cause or help maintain work 
 refusal in many youngsters, although it would be an oversimplification to imply that all work  
refusal stems from anxiety. Even though not all work refusal stems from anxiety, in this issue  
we will only focus on anxious work refusers.   
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<title> 
 
Top Secret Classroom Management--  
What Teachers Need to Know But Aren't Taught 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#course</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
 You may have seen it in the headlines this week: Many 
 new teachers quit during their first three 
 years. In Oregon, where we are based, a whopping one-quarter  
of beginning teachers don't stay 
 in the field beyond their third year. Many novice teachers cite serious  
classroom management problems as a reason for leaving the profession.  
Here is some help for that concern. You probably have at least one 
 student who is your top classroom management nightmare, 
 and nothing you do seems to help. When you were 
 in college, you got lots of theoretical training, but you  
probably weren't offered a wide array of 
 practical, targeted tools to manage unmanageable youngsters.  
The consequence of that is that you may not 
 have been sufficiently trained to manage unmanageable students.  
The practical tools and information 
 certainly do exist, and have been around for a long time, but are still  
not routinely offered to educators in college.  
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<title> 
 
Improve the Sounds 
That Come from 
Your Class Clowns:  
4 Steps to Improve Classroom Management 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#improve</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:1px;height:1px"/>]]> 
  The sounds that come from your class clowns can make or break 
 nearly any class or group activity. Because of this, it is 
 absolutely critical that students be able to manage their verbiage and conduct.  
Although most schools and agencies want students to consistently manage 
 their verbiage and conduct, very few sites have a formal, written-down plan 
 to teach their youngsters the specific nuts-and-bolts skills that they need 
 to comply. So, self-control skills are expected in most schools and agencies,  
but not explicitly taught in most schools and agencies. Not surprisingly, 
 students who aren't taught self-control skills, quite 
 often lack those self-control skills. 
Here are the initial four skills that  
your aspiring comedians and wannabe talk show hosts need 
 to transform show time into school or work time.  
 
 
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<title>Free eBook or Workshop Registration for Every Subscriber:  
It's Our 18th Birthday, 
But You Get the Present and Some Brand New Interventions 
 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#ebook</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
 To thank all 10,000 plus of you teachers, counselors, psychologists, 
 social workers and juvenile justice workers for being part of  
our 18 years of helping youth professionals help troubled  
youth, every subscriber to this internet magazine,  
can receive a free $15 ebook or free $169 workshop registration.  
Yes, every one of all 10,000 plus of you will get either 
 The Quickest Kid Fixer-Uppers Volume 1 ebook, 
 or a completely free registration to any Spring 2007  
Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel  
Troubled Youth Workshop coming soon to  
Atlanta GA, Cincinnati OH, Los Angeles CA, 
 Dallas TX, St. Louis MO and Seattle WA. 
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<title>The 7 Best New Strategies for 2007:  
Creative Methods 
to Jump-Start Your Students' New Year 
 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#principal</link> 
 
<description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
style="border-width:0px;width:155px;height:155px"/>]]> 
Here are some brand new interventions for the brand new year. These methods 
 are delightful, new ideas that can turnaround dropouts, boost motivation, 
 combat problem behavior, and launch apathetic students into a better new 
 year. These lively classroom management and group management devices are 
 perfect for any teacher, special educator, group home worker, juvenile court 
 counselor, social worker, school counselor, or foster parent. Build a better year for your troubled 
 and problem students with Youth Change's best, new behavior intervention techniques 
 for your classroom, group room or office in 2007. 
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<title>What to Do About Depressed Students 
When the Happy Holidays Aren't Happy 
</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#charter</link> 
 
<description> 
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What do I do about students who get depressed around the holidays? That's the top question  
we've begun hearing from the participants in our Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel 
 Troubled Youth Workshops. We only have a few more presentations of the class this year, but 
 we expect to hear this query a lot at those remaining general sessions. In case you won't be able to 
 join us in Seattle, Phoenix or Austin for those final stops of 2006 (see the full schedule below), 
 here is a peek at some 
 of the interventions that we will be providing at those events to help with that problem. 
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<title>Behavior Interventions for Younger and Older Students 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/articles.html#young</link> 
 
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It's a question we get all the time. People are constantly asking if our behavior methods fit the age group they 
 work with. We always give the same answer, that most of our interventions can be easily tailored to 
 fit any age group. We do tend to put what we call a "hook" or "edge" on some interventions. Adding that 
 element can often make the intervention work better with an older student. To use that intervention with 
 younger students, you simply drop out that aspect of the strategy. 
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<title>Essential Children's Pain Relievers:   
Your Actions Can Ease or Worsen Trauma and Tragedy 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
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Presenting our Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel Troubled Youth Workshop  
 at schools in Katrina-ravaged New Orleans and Waveland, Mississippi in the past few weeks  
was a real eye-opener. While most of our readers will hopefully never have to cope 
 with the level of trauma that the Gulf Coast area still faces, you still will 
 encounter your share of youngsters coping with death, divorce, loss, abuse, 
 and other tragedy. It is critical that you know as much as you can about working with 
 these students as even little mistakes can be quite damaging to youngsters who are 
 struggling. 
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<title>Transform Your Classroom Management Nightmare 
 into Your Classroom Management Dream-- Includes Handout 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
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In our workshops 
and classroom management books, 
 we devote hours to covering how to control 
 even uncontrollable classrooms and groups. We can't magically squeeze all 
 those hours of must-know classroom management information 
 into this small space, but we can give you 
 at least a few of the most important elements to get you on the path to 
 ending your classroom management nightmare. Here are the top steps  
 to at least start you down the road to managing unmanageable 
 classrooms: 
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<title>Our Most Amazing Motivation Methods for the Most Unmotivated Students 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
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We know exactly which problem teachers consider to be the top kid problem 
 in their classroom. We spent the entire summer crisscrossing the U.S. 
 bringing our Breakthrough Strategies to Teach and Counsel Troubled 
 Youth Workshop to school and agency 
 staff inservice and professional development days. From as far south as New 
 Orleans to as far north as Ashland, Ohio, teachers asked for compelling, new 
 methods to turn on turned-off students. Here are some of our newest 
 motivational methods for your most apathetic, bored, disinterested and 
 unmotivated students: 
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<title>Back to School Success Secrets 
 to Solve Classroom Management Problems</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
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It's a new school year, but for many youngsters back to  
school means back to problems. It can seem like such a mystery why so 
 many of today's kids struggle so much each school year, but perhaps we've 
 overlooked a common sense explanation and solution. 
 Have you ever noticed that we don't actually teach kids to be students?  
It's true. While every school district has a formal, written-down plan to 
 teach kids academics, few districts have a formal,  
written-down plan to teach kids how to be students and take advantage  
of all the great academics they are offered. Perhaps we need to teach kids 
 to be students exactly the same way we teach them how to read,  
learn math, and master social studies.  
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<title>The Most Beloved Interventions from the Past 100 Issues 
 of the Problem Student Problem-Solver Magazine</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
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As we looked back on 7 years and all 100 issues of the Problem Student 
Problem-Solver magazine, 
 we thought we'd bring you the top intervention from each year. 
 Our selections are based on the comments we receive from 
participants at our live workshops. Chances are you have not read 
 every word of each of the 100 issues, or been a subscriber 
 for the full 7 years, so here are some of our most adored and  
talked-about interventions that you just may have missed. Some of 
 these methods may transform your classroom and enhance your 
 classroom management results. 
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<title>How to Reverse the Soaring High School Student Dropout Rate</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
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If schools took 10% of the time and energy that they are compelled to 
     dedicate to high stakes testing and shifted their efforts to School 
     Skills Training, the worsening dropout rate might be reversed. What 
     should School Skills Training include? Any skill, attitude or motivation 
     that students need to succeed. For students at risk of dropping out, 
     motivation might head the list, followed by attendance and punctuality. 
     All students need specific skill training in areas like teacher interaction 
     skills, homework management skills, class discussion skills, 
     hallway behavior, peer interaction skills, requesting help, and so on. 
     If your school expects these skills from students, but does not teach 
     them, that is unfair. It is not fair to expect skills you have not taught. 
     Here is a sampling of interventions for motivation to impact your 
     potential 30% dropouts.   
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<title>Attention-Grabbing Techniques for ADHD Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
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  Need some new ideas for your children and youth who 
    have ADHD? Here are some of our favorites that you 
    may find to be refreshingly different from what you  
    are using now. All of these interventions are not only 
    appropriate for your youth and children who have ADHD, 
    but these interventions may also be essential training 
    for any youngster. Remember: It is normal for many 
    children and youth to be high energy and in motion. 
    Because of that, these interventions should be 
    offered as basic training for all students. 
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<title>Why Can't Character Ed End Your Classroom Management Nightmares?</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
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     Character ed is becoming more and more popular in schools all 
   over the U.S. But in our workshops around the country, more 
   and more educators and counselors are complaining that 
   character ed is not the solution for every youngster. They want 
   to know what is wrong with character ed approaches. This article 
   tells you what is wrong and exactly what you can do to easily fix it. 
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<title>Dynamic Ways to Deal with Drug Dealers: Methods for Teachers, 
Counselors and Youth Workers 
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<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
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       Since drug dealing is not a small, inconsequential problem area, 
       but is quite serious, note that many of our strategies in this area 
       are deliberately hard-hitting, dramatic, unusual or forceful. Use 
       good judgement to evaluate whether a method is a good fit for 
       you to use with your students in your setting.  Also, make sure you 
       are really knowledgeable about conduct disorders, a topic that 
       we have frequently covered in this magazine. You will need to have 
       razor-sharp skills with conduct disorders because many students 
       who are successful dealers, may also be conduct disordered.  
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<title>Do You Know What to Do About Oppositional-Defiant Youth?</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
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  Oppositional Defiant Disorder is a mental health 
  diagnostic term that can be applied by a mental health 
  professional to describe some severely misbehaved 
  youth and children. Although this youngster may 
  be a real handful to manage, this diagnosis is an 
  infinitely more hopeful and workable one than 
  Conduct Disorder, which can appear similar... 
  Here is a pop quiz to test your knowledge.  
  Don&apos;t  worry, the answers are below. These 
  questions capture some of the most common 
  misconceptions and questions we constantly 
  hear in our workshops about these two types of 
  hard-to-manage youth.  
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<title>Interventions for Students Who Know It All Already</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
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  It&apos;s no fun to work with kids who know it all already. Some 
  of these youngsters can be quite arrogant and disdainful. 
  Others will convey a sense of superiority that serves to 
  effectively isolate them from their peers. Many adolescents 
  routinely believe they know more than adults, so if you 
  work with teens, you may need every one of the approaches 
  listed below. These methods can moderate the amount of 
  time you have to spend each day convincing students that 
  they don't know it all already. These interventions may 
  actually help some of your know-it-all students 
  realize that they might still have something to learn from 
  you and your site.  
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<title>The #1 Intervention That Students Can't Resist... 
That You Already Have But May Not Use</title> 
 
<link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html#classroom</link> 
 
<description> 
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Can you name the #1 intervention that your students can&apos;t resist? 
Here is a hint: It&apos;s an intervention that everyone has, but many 
of us forget to use. It&apos;s a method that is practically guaranteed 
to capture your students&apos; interest and attention, and to make 
them more likely to receive and remember your message. What is it? 
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 <title>6 New Youth Change Tools for 2006</title> 
 <link>http://www.youthchg.com/conference.html</link> 
 <description> 
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  It may be a new year, but you are probably still dealing with the same 
  old &quot;kid problems.&quot; The bad attitudes, disrespect, peer conflict, 
  lying, school failure or family problems didn&apos;t change when you flipped 
  the page on the calendar. Don&apos;t let last year&apos;s problems create another 
  difficult year. Resolve to stop using last year&apos;s failed solutions, and  
  instead substitute updated, more effective methods like those 
  contained in our books, instant ebooks, workshops and web site. This  
  may be the right moment to stop using methods that didn&apos;t work well 
  in 2005, and will fare no better in 2006. If you don&apos;t decide now to 
  switch to more updated, more effective methods, you may continue to 
  find your job discouraging and frustrating, and your students may 
  continue to struggle and be very hard to manage. What better time to 
  make the switch than as you flip the page on the calendar? You might 
  actually discover that working with difficult kids doesn&apos;t have to be 
  so difficult. 
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 <title>Free Printable Teacher Handouts from New Youth Change eBooks</title> 
 <link>http://www.youthchg.com/printable.html</link> 
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 Nearly every one of Youth Change&apos;s most creative, surprising and forceful intervention handouts are in our brand new &quot;Behavior Change Handouts&quot; ebooks. You can own them in a lightening-fast 60 seconds. They are that easy to download, and you can try out some handouts free. &quot;Controlling Myself and My Feelings&quot; gives you all of our most effective self-control devices in one place. The handouts are fully reproducible and include &quot;If You&apos;re Rude, You&apos;re Our Dude&quot; and &quot;Find Work with a Temper Like That.&quot; &quot;Becoming a Motivated and Prepared Student and Worker&quot; has nearly all of our inventive ideas for work refusers, apathetic students, truants and bored youngsters. It includes many popular handouts including &quot;If Life Were This Easy, You Wouldn&apos;t Need Us&quot; and &quot;Get Paid Great to Arrive Late.&quot; Get and print several worksheets free to see them for yourself. The worksheets are designed to work when conventional methods fail. Loaded with cartoons, games, quizzes, contests, stories, and every imaginable intervention, you are bound to find methods that work with even the most hard-to-reach youngsters.  
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 <title>All-Time Favorite Interventions</title> 
 <link>http://www.youthchg.com/favori.html</link> 
 <description> 
<![CDATA[<img done="y" src="http:/www.youthchg.com/images/teach144rev2.gif"  
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 Here are some of our all-time favorite interventions from 
Youth Change&apos;s Breakthrough Strategies Workshops and Books. 
Take a peek at a sampling of our lesson methods and activities, designed to work for children with an array of problem areas, including children with attachment problems, angry youth, children with autism, unmotivated youth, defiant adolescents, Asperger&apos;s children, children with bad behavior, neglected children, abused children, and more. These activities are perfect for adolescents, make wonderful lessons for groups, and provide the anger-reducers and bad behavior-busters you need. Want a great activity for adolescents? Need a lesson about anger? Not sure how to help children manage the problems they face from child abuse or neglect? Here is a tiny peek at our massive wealth of activities, lessons and interventions.  
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 <title>Maximum-Strength Motivation-Makers</title> 
 <link>http://www.youthchg.com/nws3moti.html</link> 
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Working with unmotivated children and youth doesn&apos;t have to be so  
difficult with these surprisingly unusual, compelling interventions that 
 you just can&apos;t find anywhere else. Motivation is one of the many 
 essential school kills that schools do not formally and systematically 
 teach students. But, without motivation, kids don&apos;t look, act or sound like students. 
Entrenched negative attitudes can make it seem impossible to teach unmotivated youth. 
 Here are some of the most common reasons kids believe that 
 they won&apos;t need school, and some of our most dramatic and powerful ways 
 to convincingly demonstrate otherwise. 
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 <title>Extreme Violence</title> 
 <link>http://www.youthchg.com/hottopic.html</link> 
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&quot;They&apos;re like little match sticks waiting to be lit&quot; 
 A judge in Springfield, Oregon, site of a school shooting in May, 1998 
This article for youth professionals explains how to tell which youth may pose the highest risk for potential serious harm, and what you must do now to understand and work with them. To best ensure your safety, and the safety of your other students, and to effectively teach and counsel all youth in our violent times, be sure to fully upgrade your skills to become expert on all your &quot;little match sticks waiting to be lit.&quot; 
By Ruth Herman Wells, M.S., Youth Change </description> 
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