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Dalena Dillman Taylor, PhD, LPC, RPT, is an assistant professor at the University of Central Florida, past president of the North Texas Association for Play Therapy (2013–2014), and the play therapy certificate coordinator at UCF. Dr. Dillman Taylor graduated from the University of North Texas with doctorate of philosophy in counseling, with a specialty in play therapy in 2013. Dr. Dillman Taylor is a trained Adlerian play therapist and focuses her research on the effectiveness of Adlerian play therapy with children and adolescents who demonstrate disruptive behaviors or academic difficulties in the classroom and at home.
In This Episode:
"Be a thermostat, not a thermometer! Learn to RESPOND (reflect) rather than REACT. The child's feelings are not your feelings and needn't escalate with him/her."
"What's most important may not be what you do, but what you do after what you did! We are certain to make mistakes, but we can recover. It is how we handle our mistakes that make the difference. "
Resources
Mindfulness, Brain Hand Model by Dr. Dan Siegel's Video
CPRT Training in June 2016 with Dr. Taylor
http://education.ucf.edu/playtherapy/events.cfm
Center for Play Therapy in Denton Texas
By Jackie Flynn, EMDRIA Approved Consultant4.5
7373 ratings
Dalena Dillman Taylor, PhD, LPC, RPT, is an assistant professor at the University of Central Florida, past president of the North Texas Association for Play Therapy (2013–2014), and the play therapy certificate coordinator at UCF. Dr. Dillman Taylor graduated from the University of North Texas with doctorate of philosophy in counseling, with a specialty in play therapy in 2013. Dr. Dillman Taylor is a trained Adlerian play therapist and focuses her research on the effectiveness of Adlerian play therapy with children and adolescents who demonstrate disruptive behaviors or academic difficulties in the classroom and at home.
In This Episode:
"Be a thermostat, not a thermometer! Learn to RESPOND (reflect) rather than REACT. The child's feelings are not your feelings and needn't escalate with him/her."
"What's most important may not be what you do, but what you do after what you did! We are certain to make mistakes, but we can recover. It is how we handle our mistakes that make the difference. "
Resources
Mindfulness, Brain Hand Model by Dr. Dan Siegel's Video
CPRT Training in June 2016 with Dr. Taylor
http://education.ucf.edu/playtherapy/events.cfm
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