The Berkeley puppet interview manuals. Berkeley, CA University of California. & Woltmann, A. The use of puppet shows as a therapeutic method for behaviour problems in children. Springfield, IL: C.C. Woltmann, A.G. Spontaneous puppetry by children as a projective method. In A Rabin & M Howarth (Eds). Thank you for your interest in the Berkeley Puppet Interview (BPI). The BPI, building on a rich tradition of using puppets in clinical and research applications, was developed (Ablow & Measelle, 1993) to address the absence of standardized methodologies appropriate for measuring young children’s perceptions of themselves and their environments.
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Abstract
Children and youth who have experienced foster care or orphanage-rearing have often experienced complex developmental trauma, demonstrating an interactive set of psychological and behavioral issues. Trust-Based Relational Intervention (TBRI) is a therapeutic model that trains caregivers to provide effective support and treatment for at-risk children. TBRI has been applied in orphanages, courts, residential treatment facilities, group homes, foster and adoptive homes, churches, and schools. It has been used effectively with children and youth of all ages and all risk levels. This article provides the research base for TBRI and examples of how it is applied.
Whether coming from a background of abuse, neglect, or trauma, children in these sub-populations often share similar behavioral outcomes because they share a common experience—complex developmental trauma. Trauma can be broadly induced by such risk factors as physical, emotional, or sexual abuse; natural disasters; or traumatic events including medical interventions, long-term hospitalization, and much more. However, for the purposes of this article, we seek to elucidate the impact of trauma among children and youth who have experienced foster care or institutionalization. Harvard University, in 2005, released data confirming that children in the U.S. foster system experienced trauma in the form of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) at a rate more than twice that of combat veterans (Pecora, White, Jackson, & Wiggins), making this a particularly vulnerable population of children and youth.
Complex developmental trauma is a diagnosis that recognizes the global impact of trauma and is described by van der Kolk and Courtois (2005) as “the experience of multiple, chronic, and prolonged, developmentally adverse traumatic events, most often of an interpersonal nature” (p. 402). Early trauma and stress can have a lasting effect on development, triggering delays in social competence (), development of dysfunctional coping behaviors, and significantly altering a child's brain chemistry, particularly when the adverse condition is chronic and there is a lack of nurturing support (; Carrion, 2006). For many adopted and foster children, these dysfunctional behaviors create barriers to the development of healthy relationships in new family environments, and without intervention, problem behaviors tend to persist and intensify into adolescence (Verhulst, 2000).
Currently, there is a scarcity of effective treatments that address complex developmental trauma (van der Kolk & Courtois, 2005). One reason for this scarcity is that, as of this writing, the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5; APA, 2013) has not made a distinction between “acute trauma,” resulting from a single and/or psychologically isolated incident (e.g., experiencing a tornado, the events of September 11, or an auto accident) and “complex trauma,” resulting from multiple, diverse psychologically overlapping incidents (e.g., chronic sexual abuse, physical abuse, or even ongoing painful medical procedures induced by a chronic medical condition). Children and youth suffering from complex trauma most often exhibit disorders related to attachment systems, affect regulation, physiology, dissociation, behavioral control, cognition, and self-concept (Cook, Blaustein, Spinazolla, & van der Kolk, 2003). These types of disorders can lead to a variety of diagnoses typically treated with a combination of different approaches. Most often, children are treated through the traditional medical model—consisting of visits to a practitioner's office, with caregivers playing a superficial role in the child's treatment. However, interventions that include caregivers may be more effective because treatment occurs in the child's environment where challenges occur. While children may spend an hour a week in a professional's office, they spend vast hours in the care of their parents or caregivers. In particular it has been noted that relationship-based trauma can only be resolved through loving, stable relationships, such as can be offered by nurturing caregivers.
There are three factors, first identified by van der Kolk (2005), and later discussed by Bath (2008) as the three main “pillars” that should be included in any program designed to treat complex trauma. These are (a) development of safety, (b) promotion of healing relationships, and (c) teaching of self-management and coping skills. These elements parallel the three evidence-based principles of Trust-Based Relational Intervention (TBRI) developed at the Texas Christian University Institute of Child Development.
The three TBRI principles are
Empowerment—attention to physical needs;
- 2.
Connection—attention to attachment needs; and
Correction—attention to behavioral needs.
These principles help both caregiver and child learn healthy ways of interacting so both are able to play a role in the healing process.
TBRI has become formalized over time through ongoing research in our lab; however, its foundations emerged 14 years ago at our first summer day camp for foster and adopted children who had experienced neglect, abuse, or trauma. At that first camp, later named Camp Hope by the parents whose children attended, we documented unprecedented behavioral and attachment gains in our 10 young campers under the age of 10. Camp protocols were planned to address the physical, behavioral, and relational needs of the children, and the camp environment was rich in sensory activities, social skills groups, “nurture groups” (described later in this article) and more. Parents and researchers were caught off guard by the dramatic gains in such a brief intervention. While we were exhilarated by the gains we documented, within two months after camp, our joy turned to grief, as we watched the gains erode in some children, as they deteriorated to their former aberrant behavioral and relational strategies. This devastating loss propelled us to study further the gains of camp, to understand how these gains had occurred, and to understand why for some children they were lost so quickly. What we discovered, and our journey toward understanding, is illustrated here through data and individual stories from a rich data set gathered over the past decade and a half. As part of that journey, through research and program evaluation, TBRI has emerged as a clear set of developmental principles for bringing healing to at-risk youngsters.
Previous publications briefly summarize the main components of TBRI (Purvis, Cross, & Pennings, 2009; Purvis, Cross, & Sunshine, 2007), and there is growing empirical evidence showing positive outcomes for the TBRI model as a whole (Purvis & Cross, 2006; Purvis, Cross, Federici, Johnson, & McKenzie, 2007). However, there is still a need to provide a thorough review of the empirical evidence supporting each component of TBRI and an illustration of each component, which is the purpose of this article.
THE TBRI PRINCIPLES
First, the TBRI empowering principles address the ecological (external/environmental) and physiological (internal/physical) needs of the child. By ensuring these basic needs are met, the effectiveness of the connecting and correcting principles are greatly improved. Second, the connecting principles address relational and attachment needs, focusing on awareness, engagement, and attunement. Third, the correcting principles teach self-regulation and appropriate boundaries, and promote healthy behaviors for caregiver and child (see Appendix for examples of typical activities for each of the principles).
The Empowering Principles
We know that a child's emotional development, including the ability to form secure attachments, is affected by ecological and physiological factors (Bronfenbrenner & Morris, 1998; ). The empowering principles set the stage for positive change by ensuring healthy conditions for children. For example, a child who is chronically hungry due to poverty has little capacity for learning or joyful play because his fear of hunger dominates his thoughts and behaviors. Also, creating an environment that fosters felt-safety is a critical component in this process. This assumption emphasizes the difference between a child actually being safe and feeling safe. For although an adoptive parent may know with certainty that the child they adopted from hard places will never suffer devastating hunger or malnutrition again, the message must be conveyed in ways the child can understand. For these parents, partnering with their child to create a sense of safety may include strategies such as helping the child shop for nourishing snacks (e.g., fruit, nuts, raisins) to put in a specially prepared bowl in their room. Wearing a fanny pack with nutritious snacks may also give “evidence” to the child that they will not be hungry again. Before, the caregiver knew that food would always be available, but now with these strategies, the child has tangible evidence that his or her needs will be met. By providing this type of concrete evidence, a caregiver can partner with their child to create a powerful sense of felt-safety. The main TBRI empowering principles are summarized below.
Safe and structured environment
A major detrimental outcome of complex developmental trauma is chronic fear, which impacts both cognitive and emotional functioning (; Perry, 2001). However, children who feel that their environment and relationships are safe and predictable can learn to trust others and develop healthy emotions and behaviors that are trust-driven rather than fear-driven (). All TBRI principles and practices are designed to create this sense of felt-safety in children.
A key ingredient to creating a safe, predictable environment is to ensure smooth transitions for children. The three main types of transitions are (a) daily transitions, (b) major life transitions, and (c) developmental transitions.
Daily transitions are the “joints” that connect daily experiences, and these pose challenges for children who are fear-driven and for those with poor self-regulation. By explicitly managing daily transitions (e.g., providing children with advance notice before transitions) problem behaviors can be reduced significantly (Sainato, 1990). Simply alerting a child who, for example is swimming, that in “five minutes we'll need to get out of the pool,” can provide these transitions. A more emotionally fragile child may require a series of transition alerts. For example, giving alerts at 15, 10, 5, and 1 minute before a transition.
Major life transitions (e.g., first day of school, joining a new family) are also stressful. We can help children negotiate these difficult situations through a variety of strategies, including life books, memory books, storytelling, and journaling (Cowan & Cowan, 2003; Pennebaker & Stone, 2004; Nicolopoulou, Barbosa de Sa', Ilgaz, & Brockmeyer, 2010). Life books can be used, for example with a former foster child who has had numerous placement changes prior to adoption and who is fearful of changes or transitions. Creating pages with photos, drawings, and personal notes can help the child begin to settle in with a knowledge that he has arrived in his “forever family.” Story telling is a powerful tool that has been used across cultures for many generations. Around a fireplace, a hearth, or a kitchen table, the telling of our stories has provided continuity and transition throughout time. A high-ranking marine officer reported in personal conversation, that post-traumatic stress disorder was unknown among the military until the Viet Nam war because of this powerful telling of stories. Before that time, soldiers were transported to and from war in large transport ships, spending weeks or even months crossing the ocean. During the days of their long journey, it is reported that they played cards by the hours and told their stories over and over and over again. Being safe with others who understood their story and “giving voice” to their fears, pains, terrors and hopes, provided a healing transition for those military personnel returning from war.
Developmental transitions occur as the brain continues to reorganize itself during major developmental milestones throughout the lifespan (e.g., the transition from infancy to toddlerhood, the transition from childhood to adolescence) (Nelson, 2011). These transitions can be seen as opportunities to positively impact a system while it is unstable and reorganizing itself (Brazelton, 2000; Niklasson, Niklasson, & Norlander, 2010). Overall, we can help children feel safe by increasing predictability and perceived control throughout the day (e.g., charting daily or life events) (Pennebaker & Stone, 2004). Family or daily rituals are also an effective way to increase predictability, manage transitions, and build family cohesion (). Knowing, for example, that the family will eat dinner together each evening at 6:00 p.m. becomes a stabilizing ritual in the life of a developing child.
Telling of our stories has been a mechanism for healing throughout recorded history in all cultures and ages. On a recent trip to Africa, part of our team met with the First Lady of an African nation that experienced genocide during the previous generation. Aware of the deep, gaping wounds that left their mark on all generations of that nation, the First Lady asked how to bring healing to victims of genocide for whom much of healthy development had come to a halt. Our answer was categorically clear—throughout all time, we have healed by the telling of our stories.
Sensory needs
Children with histories of institutionalization (long-term hospitalization or orphanage care), trauma, and/or prenatal or perinatal stress often have sensory processing disorders that can negatively impact behavior, social skills, motor skills, and academic performance (Cermak, 2009; Cermak & Groza, 1998). These children may exhibit mystifying behaviors. For example, they may seem to be “picky eaters” refusing foods with exception of a singular texture food. Oral sensitivity to foods of different texture is often a clue to Sensory Processing Disorder. In addition, they may constantly break pencils and crayons if they have a sensory issue with pressure (called a proprioceptive deficit). Children who are volatile if their socks or turtleneck sweaters are too tight might be also manifesting the same proprioceptive deficit. One elementary-school child we served was punished for punching another child in the stomach while standing in line for lunch before the principal and teacher were alerted to his sensory deficit in processing the pushing and shoving of the child standing behind him. Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD) limited the boy's capacity to understand that the child he hit had not intended to harm him, but was rather jostling playfully while waiting for lunch. Behaviors such as this are frequently misunderstood as malicious, rather than sensory defensiveness, creating additional risk for children and youth with SPD.
However, sensory processing deficits can be overcome with appropriate interventions that address the sensory system (Ayres, 1972a, 1972b; ; ; Parham, 1998). For instance, a protocol of regular, caring touch improves physiological health, attachment issues, and sensory issues (; Montagu, 1986). Also, programs including a daily schedule of frequent, systematic somatosensory stimulation followed by physical activity have documented significant improvement for children with sensory issues (; ; Purvis & Cross, 2007). Sensory activities, sensory diets (a daily schedule of sensory activities and experiences), and sensory rooms have all shown to help children and adolescents organize their mental and emotional states (Dorman et al., 2009; Kranowitz, 2006; Miller & Fuller, 2007).1
Nutrition
We know that good nutrition is important for behavior development (Pollit, 1988; ). Proper nutrition, including multi-vitamin and multi-mineral supplements, can improve cognitive and emotional functioning with behaviorally disordered children (; ; ). Foods such as turkey, fish, whole grains, nuts, lentils, and Omega-3 fatty acids provide the building blocks for healthy brain chemistry and improved behavior in children (; ; ; ). Longitudinal research documents increased levels of aggression and violence among youth who suffered early malnutrition (; ). Caregivers of those who experienced significant early malnutrition may find great benefit in specialized testing and intervention, such as may be offered by a certified nutritionist or medical doctor who specializes in functional medicine.
Children and youth with histories of prenatal exposure to substance (i.e., drugs, alcohol) and those who experience early hardships often have significant changes to insulin receptor sites, making them subject to dramatic shifts in behavior when their blood sugar begins to drop below optimal levels. In our work with children, we implement a protocol of offering nutritious snacks every two hours. Regularly scheduled snacks and meals (that include protein and complex carbohydrates) are empowering because they ensure adequate, sustained blood sugar levels to support positive behaviors, stable moods, and optimal cognitive functioning including attention and self-regulation (; ; ). Caregivers we have trained in TBRI report significant positive changes in behavior simply by stabilizing blood sugar levels. This is obviously a challenge in settings where food availability is limited and where costly nutritious snacks are outside the financial means of a family or facility. In our work with orphanage staff in Romania, Ethiopia, and Rwanda, some facilities we have trained were only able to make more frequent, but smaller portions of the gruel that was available to them.
Hydration also improves mental functioning, including attention and memory performance (; ). Of note, one neurotransmitter, glutamate, is associated with aggressive behaviors, seizures, and various volatile behaviors. This neurotransmitter is more active in conditions of dehydration. Behavior and cognition can be improved simply through making water and other hydrating drinks readily available (; ). We have analogous findings in our research, in which we teach caregivers to offer water and food every two hours to children and youth in their care. A TBRI-informed residential facility in Texas that houses nearly 200 adolescents who are unable to live with their families, recently began offering snacks and drinks every two hours, as well as making them readily available at all times. Caregivers in that facility have documented significant improvements in both mood and behavior. In taped interviews, staff noted a significant deepening of trust with the youth, as they experienced felt-safety about their needs for food. In all, frequent, healthy snacks and drinks can improve children's behavior.
Other empowering principles
Adequate sleep is a primary determinant of child and adolescent well-being, including cognitive functioning and emotion regulation (). Children from hard places often have sleep dysregulation for a variety of reasons, including the fact that some of them were harmed in the night. Consulting with one residential facility in the case of two youngsters, ages five and six, who were in protective custody of Child Protective Services, we recommended that the siblings be provided with weighted blankets for bedtime, which provide deep muscle input and calming (). Calling early the next morning, delighted staff reported that both boys slept soundly through the night for their first time since coming into protective custody. These seemingly simple tools can have significant impact in providing a healing environment for at-risk youngsters.
Also, regular physical activity promotes cognitive, social, and emotional development () and deep-breathing exercises (e.g., yoga or other) improve well-being and mental functioning (Peck, Kehle, Bray, & Theodore, 2005; Stueck & Gloeckner, 2005). For example, a program developed for school-age children at Yale University, ABC for Fitness (), creates opportunities for brief bursts of physical activity such as jumping jacks or running in place every 60 minutes during school hours. Documented changes include not only lowering of obesity, increasing physical fitness, and improving academic performance, but also lowering of medications such as those for asthma and ADHD.
The Hope Connection summer day camp for children with histories of abuse, neglect, and trauma provides physical activity, dance movement, or opportunities for outdoor play every two hours. Data from the camp documents dramatic reduction in the stress chemical, cortisol, as well as reduction in negative behaviors and significant improvement in positive behaviors (Purvis, Cross, Federici, et al., 2007). We have implemented similar activities in schools, RTCs, homes, and orphanages with equal success. Overall, the TBRI empowering principles meet children's basic physical needs and support healthy emotional, relational, and behavioral development.
The Connecting Principles
The connecting principles enable both child and parent to experience the personal and interpersonal behaviors that build trust and lead to secure attachment. This set of principles closely resembles behavioral connections between a mother and her newborn infant, consisting of sustained eye contact, affectionate touch, and consistently high levels of attention to needs. Biological mothers naturally “give voice” to their infants, and TBRI is designed to “give voice” to those who didn't have that opportunity from their biological parents. Building secure attachment relationships is important, including findings that the origins of self-regulation stem from a child's attachment relationships (; Schore, 1994, 2001). As an attentive mother meets her infant's needs, she “imposes” regulation on the child—imposing warmth when the infant is cold, food when the infant is hungry, comfort when the infant is upset. In each case, the parent provides an “external modem” for regulation of physical and emotional needs. This tender, consistent meeting of needs becomes the foundation on which this developing child will learn to regulate his own needs and emotions. Connecting principles provide the foundation for attachment and self-regulation and include: awareness (of others and self), playful engagement, and attunement. An overview of the connecting principles follows.
Observational awareness
Work with traumatized children requires keen awareness (Endsley, 2006). It is critical for caregivers to observe their children's behavioral and physiological responses during interactions to monitor anxiety and comfort level (Grietens & Hellinckx, 2003; Siegel, 1999). By recognizing signs of stress and anxiety, caregivers can respond appropriately to children who are often unable to verbalize their needs. TBRI emphasizes recognition of nonverbal markers of anxiety such as pupil dilation, heart rate, depth of respiration, and muscle tension so that needs do not go unmet (Perry, 1994). Insightful caregivers who become deeply aware of nonverbal cues of fight, flight, or freeze can often avert adverse behavioral episodes through attentive responsiveness.
Self-awareness
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It is also critical for caregivers to be aware of their own emotional state, attachment style, and emotional availability. Empirical studies have found that the attachment style of a primary adult caregiver predicts the child's attachment style (; ; Steele, Hodges, Kaniuk, Hillman, & Henderson, 2003; Steele et al., 2009), and child's well-being (; ; Ward, Lee, & Lipper, 2000). In our work with the highest risk children and youth we frequently find caregivers who have significant unresolved childhood or early adult histories of their own and are inadvertently triggering maladaptive behaviors in the children they are serving. For example, a woman who had the stillbirth of an infant may guard her heart unknowingly so that she doesn't experience the wrenching loss again. These individuals, though fully available for their child's physical needs, may find it difficult to be emotionally available for healing connections with their child.
In our international work, we frequently find a high percentage of orphanage staff that were themselves orphanage-reared. Because they never received tender, attentive care, it is a significant challenge for them to give tender, attentive care. We typically plan to implement nurturing activities with caregivers themselves during our days of training orphanage staff. The good news is that an adult's attachment style can change (; ) and one objective of TBRI is to provide steps that adults can take to facilitate positive changes in their attachment styles. One family, who under our supervision implemented TBRI principles in their home with their violent eleven-year-old son, found that the mother's attachment style was dramatically altered from being dismissing of attachment to being secure in her attachment relationships. The boy, who had multiple psychiatric diagnoses and had a history of aggression against his mother and sister required intense attention to his needs and yet, in learning to recognize her son's needs, this mother began to recognize her own unmet needs and to deal with her own childhood attachment experiences and attachment needs.
In addition to education about promoting healthy attachment, caregivers who implement TBRI often take the Adult Attachment Interview (AAI; George, Kaplan, & Main, 1985). Feedback from the AAI informs caregivers about their own attachment styles and provides awareness of emotional “filters” that influence their perceptions of their children and their behaviors toward them. Caregivers are then shown positive steps they can take to form secure attachment relationships with their children.
Skills of attachment
The skills of attachment () are consistent with TBRI. These are: giving care, seeking care, feeling comfortable with an autonomous self, and negotiation. The connecting principles cultivate “giving care and seeking care,” which are modeled and practiced as part of TBRI nurture group activities (some of these nurture activities are derived from Theraplay activities) (Jernberg & Booth, 1999; Purvis, Cross, Federici, et al., 2007). Connecting principles also promote “feeling comfortable with an autonomous self,” which is important for healthy relationships and stems from secure attachment. Various types of “negotiation” and compromise are found in the connecting and correcting principles. TBRI trained caregivers can actually reduce aggression in the children they serve by “giving voice.” In TBRI-informed environments, a child who is misbehaving may be asked, “Can you tell me with your words and not your behavior?” For a child or youth who persists in misbehavior we may offer negotiation opportunities, such as “If you don't want to turn the TV off now, would you like to ask for a compromise?” This giving of voice, as we call it, often becomes a firm foundation for developing trusting relationships, especially for children who lost their voices early in childhood because of the unresponsive or abusive environments in which they were harmed.
Playful engagement
Playful engagement produces warmth and trust between caregivers and children (Panksepp, 2000, 2002). It disarms fear, promotes attachment, and builds social competence (Brown, 2009; Jernberg & Booth, 1999; Robison, Lindaman, Clemons, Doyle-Buckwalter, & Ryan, 2009). Mothers who engage their infants in playful interactions naturally enhance development of attachment, socialization, and language (Montagu, 1986). However, if a child lacked this type of early playful connection, it can be cultivated through therapeutic play activities. Theraplay is an attachment-based model of playful interaction that resembles the natural playful activities observed between nurturing parents and their infants. Theraplay activities can be used to teach parents of older children to interact playfully. These activities closely resemble the interaction style that is at the heart of TBRI.
In a typical Theraplay session, the therapist guides parent and child to engage in nurturing, playful interactions that include playful touch and eye contact (Booth & Lindaman, 2000; Fesperman & Lindaman, 1998; Jernberg, 1984; Lindaman, 1996). It has been our experience that even adolescents who seem resistant and challenging actually love the opportunities for joyful, silly laughter and games. Through playful engagement, caregivers can become attuned and responsive to the children's immediate needs. Insightful caregivers can even redirect negative behaviors playfully, such as a child who is demanding forcefully that the parent give them juice may be asked playfully, “Are you askin’ or tellin'?” or “Can you try that again with respect?” I recently observed the father of a four-year-old whose son did not want him to put on his shoes, and he demanded “NO! Mommy do it!” The insightful father gently guided him to ask with respect, to which his youngster replied, “Can mommy please put on my shoes?”
Attunement
Attunement has been defined by Merriam-Webster's Dictionary as the capacity to “bring into harmony” or “to make aware or responsive.” Regardless of the intervention used, effectiveness of parent-child interventions is correlated to the degree that parents are involved with and are responsive in creating this type of harmony (Mahoney, 2009). Through verbal and nonverbal nurturing communications between caregiver and child, attunement can be achieved through matching behaviors, eye contact, voice and inflection, body position, and safe touch. For instance, voice quality (tone, volume, cadence) is a powerful part of interpersonal engagement (Finset & Del Piccolo, 2011; Malloch & Trevarthen, 2010) and touch is a powerful tool for nonverbal communication, but must be used carefully with formerly abused children and youth (Field, 2003; Finset & Del Piccolo, 2011). Matching, the act of mimicking facial expressions, sounds, or actions, develops naturally in healthy parent–child relationships and fosters attachment and felt-safety (Field, 1995; ; Schore, 1994). Behavioral state matching can facilitate harmonious social interactions with children of any age (Bernieri & Rosenthal, 1991; Field et al., 1992).
While maltreated children may have little or no experience with matching, foster or adoptive parents can learn to initiate age-appropriate matching interactions or activities to develop a stronger connection to their child (Zuckerman & Spielberger, 1976). At times in our work with at-risk children, we will offer snacks such as Tootsie Roll Pops. Of interest, as a child feels safe in our care, he will begin to request the same color Tootsie Roll Pop as his mentor. However, there may also be times when a caregiver chooses the same color snack as their young buddy, only to see the child return that candy to the bowl and chose another color. This simple behavior provides an important clue about how closely the child can be connected to his caregivers at that time. When caregivers are taught to carefully, attentively enter the child's physical and emotional space, a new foundation for trust begins to emerge, bringing with it behavioral and physiological gains. Data from our summer camps demonstrate dramatic improvement in behavior coupled with dramatic reduction of the stress chemical, cortisol. For the children whose fear and reactivity is reduced (as evidenced by reduced stress chemical cortisol), gains in behavior, cognition, and even language are greatest (Purvis & Cross, 2006).
Overall, the connecting principles give caregivers tools to build trusting, secure attachment relationships with their children. Improving the caregiver–child relationship is key to reversing the adverse effects of early stress on the brain, reducing stress-related behavior, and improving psychosocial functioning (). It has been said that relationship-based trauma can only be healed through a nurturing relationship and the capacity for connecting is the core ingredient for cultivating that type of relationship.
The Correcting Principles
Parental regulation of food, warmth, sensory input, and emotional soothing during infancy and early childhood provide physical and emotional security that create a foundation for the development self-regulatory behaviors. Maltreated children often lack this foundational regulatory support (Als, Lester, Tronick, & Brazelton, 1982; Brazelton & Greenspan, 2000; Tronick, 1995). Regulatory disordered infants with moderate to severe difficulties will not outgrow these issues without intervention (DeGangi, Porges, Sickel, & Greenspan, 1993). In our summer camp for at-risk children, we play regulatory games to teach self-calming and self-awareness. For example, in one of our learning groups (called a Nurture Group) we will practice several skills for self-regulating, such as deep breathing, using fidgets, and pressing the parasympathetic pressure point just over the middle of their lip. Due to the holding of their finger sideways to press across the top of their lips, the children call this activity the “magic mustache.” After the children practice self-calming, we then give them toy Nerf guns with instructions: “There are only two rules for shooting someone. First, you must not shoot in the face and second, you must ask permission and only shoot the Nerf gun IF they say yes.” Regulatory skills are practiced in numerous ways through this playful activity. The children practice self-calming/regulation both before the game and after the game. In addition, they must regulate their actions, first asking permission, second waiting for an answer, and third, NOT shooting their Nerf gun toward a child who says “no” or toward the face of a child who says “yes.” When learned in this playful setting, these regulatory skills generalize to other settings at a fairly impressive rate. In addition to our summer camp protocol, we have implemented these activities in schools, homes, residential facilities, group homes, and orphanages.
The objective of the correcting principles is to build the child's social competence (Miltenburg & Singer, 1999) which can only be successful after establishing a foundation of empowerment and connection. The correcting principles are also based on cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), which is effective in treating a wide range of childhood disorders, including depression (Stark, Sander, & Hauser, 2006; Verdeli, Mufson, & Lee, 2006), aggression (Lochman, Powell, & Whidby, 2006; Sukhodolsky, Kassinove, & Gorman, 2004), and post-traumatic stress disorder (; Dalgleish, Meiser-Stedman, & Smith, 2005). Behavioral training that is proactive, rather than reactive, is effective in improving social problem-solving and conflict management skills in children (). In the example of the Nerf game, the children are practicing appropriate behaviors, which begin to pervade other interactions. This proactive teaching reduces the need for corrective action by adults. By planning how to handle predictable problem issues in advance, the child is prepared to react more appropriately with the practiced replacement behavior (Colvin & Sugai, 1988; Colvin, Sugai, & Patching, 1993). The correcting principles consist of both proactive and responsive strategies to promote appropriate behaviors.
Proactive behavioral strategies
TBRI proactive strategies are designed as preventative teaching measures, and consist of verbal reminders, behavioral rehearsals, role play with others or with puppets, teaching life value terms, and demonstrations of rule-following or socially appropriate behaviors that are presented in settings where problem behavior is likely. For example, role-playing involves practicing a “script” between caregiver and child to allow the child to practice appropriate responses to frustrations he or she may encounter. Working with a 16-year-old who was in a residential treatment facility (RTC) due to acts of violence against her family, we found that script practice has currency even for older youth. We would practice “showing respect” through a playful script, but first start by showing “NO respect” giving the youth an opportunity to play-act her aggression, and her typically mouthy responses. Then we would follow with a behavioral re-do, and do the same skit with the young woman then practicing respectful words. Adult caregivers involved in the script practice as well as the young woman, laughed with delight as they took turns being, first the defiant child, and then the staff person. Even this young woman who had tried to cut her mother's throat with a butcher knife was able to learn new prosocial skills in the context of this playful, proactive environment. Another script that yielded positive outgrowth with this high-risk adolescent was “use your words.” Previous to our work with her, when overwhelmed, she would try to run away, swallow something sharp to harm herself, or even try to choke or hang herself with a drawstring from her jersey. Through practicing in safe, playful settings through skits and puppet-play, she learned to use words like “I am feeling so sad” or “I am angry about that!”
Life-value terms help create a language and culture of mutual respect; similar in purpose to character education programs (Lee & Perales, 2005; Purvis, Cross, & Sunshine, 2007). Practice with life values provides children with tools to resolve issues appropriately in real-life situations. Life-value terms include: using respect, making eye contact, using words to replace negative behaviors, being gentle and kind, accepting consequences, accepting “no,” asking permission, and others. When proactive strategies are practiced regularly, problem behaviors become less frequent as children internalize appropriate behaviors for getting their needs met. With the young woman in the RTC for example, violent incident reports were reduced by 70% within weeks, through these playful interactive exercises. Although behavioral gains were almost immediate for this teenager, it is important to remember that it takes sustained, consistent, repetitions over time, in order for a youngster to be able to self-regulate with the support of an attentive adult. Based on current understanding of brain development and our own experience, lasting change will require, on average, one month per year of age for a child or youth from hard places to develop new beliefs and new behaviors, supported by compensatory brain development.
Responsive behavioral strategies
While proactive training is effective, there may still be instances when challenging behaviors are exhibited (although these should decrease over time) and in these cases responsive strategies may be necessary. Responsive strategies include Levels of Response and the IDEAL Approach, which were developed as part of the TBRI correcting principles to guide caregivers in resolving problem behaviors when they occur.
Berkeley Puppet Interview
Levels of Response, described next, identify responsive practices that are matched in intensity to the level of risk or challenge, and yet are purposeful in maintaining the connection with the child or youth:
Level One: Playful Engagement—A low-level challenge, for example mouthiness or verbal disrespect, may be met with playful engagement. For example in response to a child who demands “Give me that crayon!” the caregiver may respond playfully, “Are you askin’ or tellin'?” Then the caregiver guides the child to a behavioral re-do in which the child asks with respect for the crayon.
Level Two: Structured Engagement—With a slightly elevated challenge, such as when the child doesn't respond appropriately to playful engagement, the caregiver may offer choices. For example, a six-year-old on the playground who demanded that her teacher pick her up and carry her in, was asked at Level One, if she was “askin’ or tellin'.” The youngster replied forcefully that she was telling, to which the teacher responded, “You have two choices, you may ask with respect or you may simply walk into the building yourself.” At that level, the young girl asked with respect, and the teacher then carried her playfully into the building.
Level Three: Calming Engagement—When there is a risk of full escalation, the caregiver must be carefully attuned to this danger. At this level, caregivers are encouraged to give the child or youth a chance to do “time-in” and think about what they need while the adult is nearby. An alternative we have used in RTCs and homes with adolescents, is that in advance of difficult behaviors, the caregiver and youth may choose a “quiet place” to which the youth can ask to go when they need time to self-regulate. Typically after a few minutes the adolescent is able to return to the conversation, knowing what they need to say or do.
Level Four: Protective Engagement—At Level Four there is significant threat of violence or harm by the child, either to himself or to someone else. At this level, TBRI encourages caregivers to contain the violence while remaining calm and reassuring. Caregivers should seek formal training in an intervention accepted by laws in their state or regulations of their organization. When the violence passes, the caregiver remains with the child or youth until the connection is re-affirmed and the youngster feels safe and secure again.
Notably, in each of these levels, the goal is to sustain connectedness while guiding the child to appropriate behaviors and responses, and for the child to know that a safe adult will help them regulate until they are able to regain self-regulation. Levels are not intended as a punishment, but rather as a regulatory support. Negotiation is a critical component of all TBRI strategies, as we seek to give voice to children who have lost their voices. In particular, negotiation is vital in both proactive and responsive strategies because many harmed children and youth have learned to use violence, manipulation, control, or triangulation to keep themselves safe and to get their needs met. We significantly diminish the frequency, intensity, and duration of behavioral episodes by “giving voice” for negotiation. One adolescent girl we served had been sexually abused by numerous adults and was indiscriminant in touching adults who worked with her in our camp. We engaged her in negotiating her need for healthy touch and hugs by demonstrating first, how to get a hug by asking (NOT simply coming to adults and touching them indiscriminately). In addition, we demonstrated healthy touch and unhealthy touch, letting her practice with us. Finally, we demonstrated body-space with a game of hula-hoops—with both adult and teen each holding a hoop around their body. The adult holding a hula-hoop around herself demonstrated “This is my body-space. No one can come into my body-space without permission.” Following, the adult said, “That is your body space and no one can come into your space without permission. So how can I get a hug from you if I want one?” Then the teenager practiced the skills of negotiating her need for hugs and safe touch by asking with respect for safe, physical affection.
The IDEAL response, described next, is an acronym to remind caregivers of the five principles that should be used when challenging behaviors occur:
I—Respond immediately to the behavior (Hester, Hendrickson, & Gable, 2009) because research proves that learning is greatest when the response is in swift temporal proximity to the behavior.
D—Respond directly to the child through eye contact, giving them undivided attention, and bringing them nearer to you physically for teaching and guidance (Danforth, 2006) because research documents significant shifts in brain chemistry and activity during eye contact and proximity.
E—Respond in an efficient and measured manner. This is reflected in Levels of Response, in which caregivers use the least amount of firmness, corrective effort, and verbal directive that is required to correct the behavior (Hester, Hendrickson, & Gable, 2009). This strategy also helps children gain trust, knowing adults will not overreact to their behaviors
A—The response is action-based. Redirect the child to practice an appropriate behavior alternative. Physically lead them through a real-life “re-do” when possible. Once the “re-do” is successful (because they used the appropriate alternative behavior), praise the child (Heimlich & Ardoin, 2008; Hohnke & Sur, 1999; Reed, 1996).
L—Level the response at the behavior, not at the child. Never reject the child as a person, only respond to the behavior (Barber & Harmon, 2002; Mills & Rubin, 1998).
OTHER THERAPEUTIC INTERVENTIONS
In addition to TBRI, there are other effective therapeutic interventions for children with histories of trauma that are alternatives to the traditional medical model. However, these typically focus on a limited number of symptoms, or are tailored for a specific population. TBRI addresses all major issues that are linked with complex developmental trauma and has been adapted for a variety of settings including international orphanages, residential group homes and treatment centers, adoptive and foster homes, schools, therapeutic day camps, and for all ages of children, including adolescents. Six respected models that are effective in treating specific symptoms, clusters of symptoms, or populations, include (a) Circle of Security, (b) Theraplay, (c) Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-up (ABC); (d) the Neurosequential Model of Therapeutics (NMT), (e) the Sanctuary Model, and (f) the Attachment, Self-Regulation, and Competency model (ARC).
Circle of Security (Hoffman, Marvin, Cooper, & Powell, 2006) is a video-based parent training program that focuses on enhancing attachment relationships between parents and young children. Theraplay (Jernberg, 1984) teaches parents to use playful interactions to improve attachment and behavioral issues. As mentioned previously, Theraplay activities are utilized as one component of the TBRI intervention and we recommend Circle of Security for those who need additional intensive assistance in forming attachment relationships with young children. The ABC program (Dozier et al., 2006) includes 10 weekly in-home intervention sessions that enhance self-regulation and attachment relationships for children under age four, and improves parent sensitivity toward their children.
The Sanctuary Model (Rivard, Bloom, McCorkle, & Abramovitz, 2005) is used in residential treatment centers and focuses on creating a safe, democratic therapeutic community environment and empowering youth to develop the ability to positively affect their own lives and their communities through participation in a trauma recovery program and cognitive-behavioral therapy. The ARC Model (Kinniburgh, Blaustein, Spinazzola, & van der Kolk, 2005) provides general intervention guidelines for children with histories of complex trauma. ARC focuses on four principles (a) creating a structured and predictable environment by establishing rituals and routines, (b) increasing caregiver capacity to manage intense affect, (c) improving caregiver–child attunement, and (d) increasing the use of praise and reinforcement. However, while ARC includes a list of possible strategies that practitioners can use, it is designed to be a theoretical framework to guide practitioners to make their own intervention choices.
In addition to TBRI, another intervention that treats all major issues linked with complex developmental trauma is NMT (Perry, 2009). The three central elements of this model include: (a) obtaining a developmental history of the child (including known history of maltreatment, institutionalization, etc.), (b) performing a current assessment of functioning (including a brain map), and (c) prescribing a set of recommendations for intervention and enrichment. Typically, NMT prescribes a specific sequence of interventions (e.g., educational, enrichment, and therapeutic) for each child. With NMT, the sequence of interventions is important with the most primitive brain issues such as self-regulation and anxiety addressed first, and higher-order cognitive processes addressed in later stages of treatment. As noted by Bruce Perry (2009), one of the difficulties with NMT is that it requires an experienced clinician to oversee the process. Expense involved in using this approach can be prohibitive and it is designed for use on an individualized basis.
One of the major differences between NMT and TBRI is that TBRI utilizes generally accepted and scientifically validated practices that can be used with (or readily adapted to) all children and in all caregiving environments. We have trained orphanage staff in Romania, Ethiopia, and Rwanda, as well as courts, churches, schools, RTCs, and foster and adoptive families. In addition to its environmental adaptability, any nurturing caregiver can be trained. TBRI is not a clinical model but rather a caregiving model. Children may be assessed to determine if they have specific sensory or behavioral issues, but even without testing, TBRI can be used with optimally developing and with at-risk populations to improve their overall outcomes. For both NMT and TBRI, outcomes of research studies have been positive and additional studies are underway to further add to the empirical base for both models.
SUMMARY
Children with histories of complex developmental trauma, including those who have experienced foster care, institutionalization, maltreatment, and neglect, present unique challenges for caregivers that strive to provide the care and support they need. Treatment for the psychological and behavioral issues common to these children has typically been administered through the traditional medical model. However, long waiting lists for treatment and lack of practitioner expertise in dealing with complex developmental trauma have created a need for alternative forms of treatment. TBRI is a relationship-based model that can be administered by nurturing, insightful caregivers, and can be implemented in virtually any environment with children and youth of any age and any risk level. Holistic in nature, cost effective to implement, and developmentally respectful of the impact of trauma, TBRI appears to hold significant potential for creating positive impact in the lives of children and youth who have come from the hard places.
APPENDIX
Trust-Based Relational Intervention® (TBRI®) Abbreviated Intensive Program Activity List
Empowering principles – ecological and physiological concerns
∗Support more primitive systems so that the child can function at higher cognitive and emotional levels.
Snack or meal every two hours
Sensory integration activity every two hours
Provide consistent rituals and routines (e.g., morning & bedtime rituals)
Connecting principles – building trust and meeting relational needs
∗Giving care, seeking care, negotiating needs, being autonomous self
Affectionate activities (reading, snuggling, talking, walks, crafts, etc.)
Family time – “No hurts, stick together, have fun”
Playful engagement with child
Correcting principles – teaching children to be self-managers
∗Proactive strategies
Script practice
Gentle & kind
Showing respect
Listen & obey
Cooperate & compromise
Consequences
Permission & supervision
Rules for finding safe people
Role rehearsal (using a partner or puppets)
Reading goal chart (at meals and bedtime)
Mutual story-telling (discussing appropriate responses and behaviors)
Memory book assignments
Compliance games
Relaxation practice
“Checking engines” (emotional self-check)
Common Challenges
Transitions between activities, taking items without permission, taking turns, explosive jealousy, aggression when told “no”, environments that are overstimulating, & unstructured situations.
∗At the beginning of the TBRI® program, correcting activities are practiced multiple times during the day. As the child's behavior improves, time spent engaged in correcting activities can be reduced.
Berkeley Puppet Interview Manual Muscle Shoals
NOTE
1.For further resource see the following Web sites: The Out-of-Sync Child, http://out-of-sync-child.com; and SPD Foundation, http://www.spdfoundation.net.
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Berkeley Puppet Interview Manual Muscle Testing Grades
Parental psychological control has been linked to symptoms of psychopathology in adolescence, yet less is known about its correlates in childhood. The current study is among the first to address whether psychological control is related to internalizing and externalizing problems in early childhood. A community sample of 298 children aged 7.04 (SD = 1.15) years participated. Along with two other parenting dimensions (i.e., responsiveness and behavioural control), psychological control, internalizing and externalizing problems were assessed by means of the Berkeley Puppet Interview. Psychological control was associated with internalizing and externalizing problems, and this association remained significant while controlling for parental behavioural control and responsiveness. Results suggest that the maladaptive correlates of psychological control also manifest in developmental periods prior to adolescence. Still, it is unknown how psychological control and child psychopathology are related over time in childhood.
Berkeley Puppet Interview Manual Muscle Test
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