Ad Spot

MCS to present ‘Changing Destructive Adolescent Behavior’ to help parents

MADISON – An upcoming series of sessions can help parents or guardians deal with their troubled, difficult secondary students who attend Madison City Schools.

“Changing Destructive Adolescent Behavior” is a free, 10-week study designed for parents who are raising difficult or out-of-control adolescent children, 10 years and older. up. Sessions provide concrete, no-nonsense solutions to even the most destructive adolescent behaviors, according to the authors’ documentation.

MCS social workers Heather Hicks and Briana Hawkins will lead classes on Thursdays from Feb. 4 through April 15 from noon to 2 p.m. at MCS Central Office, 211 Celtic Drive. Classes are associated with “The Parent Project” curriculum.

The study especially can benefit parents with children who are struggling with truancy issues, behavioral conflicts, poor grades, substance use, running away from home, suicidal thoughts, arguing, childhood trauma, media influences, early teen sexuality, youth gangs, teen violence and bullying.

Program goals include a reduction in family conflict, decrease in juvenile crime, less recidivism and an improvement in school attendance and performance.

Parents can see better relationships at home by dealing with questions that are discussed in “Changing Destructive Adolescent Behavior”:

* “My son is in a gang. What can I do?”

* “What do you do when your child hits you?”

* “My child is a runaway.”

* “What should I do when my child screams and curses at me?” (parentproject.com)

One strategy from the Parent Project is for parents to choose battles carefully — especially for impulsive children. The curriculum contends that getting a child to complete homework and succeed in school is far more important than a clean room; however, honesty is a bigger priority than either of those scenarios. The Parent Project recommends dividing house rules into four categories: Zero Tolerance Rules, Negotiable Rules, Drives Me Nuts Rules, and Let It Go.

The American Bar Association’s Center on Children and the Law has selected the Parent Project as the largest, court-mandated program for juvenile diversion. “Changing Destructive Adolescent Behavior” is a favorite curriculum for middle- and high-school educators.

The Parent Project believes that parents are the answer. In 30-plus years, the company has worked with more than 500,000 parents who are raising out-of-control children.

A few slots remain open for the MCS session. Registration deadline is Jan. 22. To register, email parentprojectregistration@madisoncity.k12.al.us.

Class will observe social distancing and mask protection. For more information about the curriculum, visit parentproject.com.

Liberty Middle School

Liberty aces regionals, heads to Science Bowl national finals

Digital Version

The Madison Record digital version – March 29, 2023

Huntsville

Local hockey team in Denver today for USA Hockey National Championships

Events

Camp Invention’s summer STEM program coming to Midtown Elementary

Huntsville

Huntsville Police officer killed, one critically injured in shooting

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones falls in matchup between two of the top teams in Class 7A

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones Science Challenge instills young students’ STEM respect

Events

Madison Community Band to present “An American Spring” concert on April 4, kicks off its 30th anniversary celebration

James Clemens High School

Markowitz’s scholarship leads to Germany for 3 weeks

Madison

Cummings reappointed to school board, more questions arise over city manager issue

James Clemens High School

Jets use strong pitching and patience at the plate to overpower Charles Henderson, 12-2

Harvest

Lions screen eyesight for Second Mile Preschool

Harvest

Partnership’s Town Hall to identify treatment choices, locations

Huntsville

Flag flown over US Capitol in honor of Harvest WWII veteran’s 105th birthday

Bob Jones High School

Patriots thrash Winfield City 11-0 in Saturday double-header, plus score wins over Cullman and Buckhorn

James Clemens High School

Jets handle Tennessee teams in comfortable setting of Toyota Field

Madison

‘Spring into fitness’ with ‘bud-dy’ plan at Hogan Family YMCA

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones HOSA gain 21 berths to international conference

Huntsville

Fantasy Playhouse Children’s Theater & Academy’s conducts regional search to fill education director position 

Huntsville

Alabama Court of Criminal Appeals orders new trial of Huntsville cop William Darby’s murder verdict

Huntsville

Chargers welcome No. 12 West Georgia for three game series

Huntsville

Battle, Strong respond to Washington Post claims Space Command likely to stay in Colorado

Huntsville

No. 7 UAH back at Charger Park for three-game GSC series Saturday and Sunday

Huntsville

Huntsville approves architectural contract for Hays Farm Central Park

x