We wrote this text with the intention of appealing broadly to new counselors and experienced practitioners. We also intended for this text to be useful to counselors in a variety of settings, such as schools, hospitals and residential facilities, and outpatient clinics. We cover general principles for counseling children and adolescents before moving into more technical information about neurophysiological development across childhood and adolescence and in-depth information about counseling approaches for different developmental stages. We divide the chapters into three sections. The first section provides a background of neuroanatomy and physiology. The second section focuses on neurophysiological development during childhood and relevant counseling approaches. The third section focuses on counseling adolescents. The concluding chapter explores the delivery of neuroscience education to clients utilizing information that is introduced throughout the text. Our intent for each chapter is to present a neuroscience-informed approach to counseling children and adolescents, and thus we often draw from neuroscience findings when presenting information about child and adolescent development and counseling approaches at different developmental stages.
We recognize that terms such as childhood and adolescence are difficult to define with regard to age, as children may mature earlier or later than others (e.g., secondary sex development). For the sake of clarity, we loosely define childhood as ages 0 to 11 and adolescence as ages 12 to 18. These are loose definitions, as experts such as Adriana Galván estimate that the range for pubertal onset is 9 to 16 years. We also recognize that adolescence often ends beyond age 18. We have decided not to differentiate middle childhood (i.e., preadolescence) from late childhood in this text because we see clearer distinctions between early childhood (0–11) and adolescence (12–18) when providing counseling. For example, we have led insight-oriented groups with adolescents in which 12 or 13 is the cutoff age for inclusion. We have also successfully used insight-oriented approaches such as cognitive behavior therapy with youth ages 12 and older and have observed that play therapy is less useful with youth after approximately 10 years of age.
Each chapter includes several text features that we hope will help you to better comprehend the content. Key concepts and aligned Council for Accreditation of Counseling and Related Educational Programs standards are identified at the beginning of the chapter to assist you in understanding the content and learning objectives of each chapter. Quiz questions are provided at the end of each chapter so you can test your knowledge of key concepts explored in each chapter. Reflection questions are embedded at different points in the chapter to prompt your own deep reflection on and processing of the content. Case vignettes are used throughout the text to demonstrate how to apply concepts to counseling work. Finally, we have included a comprehensive neuroscience glossary at the back of the textbook for you to review when you come across unfamiliar terminology.
We use pseudonyms for all of the cases in this text, and we sought to intentionally mask identifying information to preserve the identities of former clients. Often we merge the narratives of several former clients into one composite case. Although we have blinded the identities of the children, adolescents, and families we have previously helped, the specific details of the case information are mostly factually accurate. Most case vignettes are brief, although two cases (those of Brooke and Wayne) are more extended and are explored across several chapters. We wanted to use these elaborated cases to describe an in-depth application of key concepts to case conceptualization and treatment planning.
The counseling field is increasingly applying neuroscience to counseling practice and is increasingly in need of training opportunities for learning how to integrate complex information into work with clients. A large concern of ours is overreliance on applied models. These are treated as primary sources by some professionals, yet they are in fact interpretations of basic neuroscience anatomy and physiology. We felt that if we summarized these applied models to counseling practice, we ran the risk of summarizing existing summarizations of neuroscience, which would have led us even further away from the primary source material of neural anatomy and physiology. Thus, you might be surprised to find that we rarely cite commonly known authors such as Daniel Siegel, Louis Cozolino, Allen Schore, and Stephen Porges in the text. We took seriously our charge of using primary sources (i.e., actual neuroscience studies) to provide accurate information about neuroscience and refrained from relying on applied models. We hope this text will increase your knowledge of basic neuroanatomy and physiology, which we believe is fundamental to applying neuroscience in your work.
In our own journeys, we have found that neuroscience has not only supported how we think about counseling but also changed our perspectives entirely. As you read through this text, we encourage you to be open to neuroscience concepts that could change the way you conceptualize and practice counseling. For example, in the text we review the impact of chronic stress and traumatic stress on neurophysiological functioning and its relationship to a host of mental health diagnoses. We also identify strategies for reducing child and adolescent stress, which can be challenging because many of these stressors are not easily reduced and often cannot be removed (e.g., academic requirements, the social environment at school, relationships with parents or guardians). We recognize that the technical nature of the neuroscience terminology might be challenging for some readers. We highly recommend referring back to key terms defined in the glossary at the end of the text to better understand key neuroscience concepts.
In our favorite textbooks, the personalities of the authors resonate through the pages. We wrote this text with the intention that you will get to know how we think and feel about counseling children and adolescents. At times, our style of writing borders on the informal, to help you understand our own backgrounds and perspectives. At other times, the information is presented in a more formal and technical fashion. We have attempted to balance these two polarities in our writing. We hope that sharing our own experiences with the topic will humanize the neuroscience information and make it more digestible to you.