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RECENT NEWS

New Textbook:
Counseling in Challenging Contexts: Working with Individuals and Families Across Clinical and Community Settings provides students and practitioners a model of practice ideally suited to working with people from diverse backgrounds. With an emphasis on cultural differences in people’s understanding of what well-being means, and building on my research on resilience from around the world, this text explores the role counselors can play enhancing people’s strengths in both clinical and community settings. This very readable text and the accompanying videos demonstrate a unique integration of strengths-based models of intervention, social ecological theory, and postmodernism, with attention to social justice and advocacy.

Available at: http://www.cengage.com/counseling/ungar

To see a description of the text and the videos that accompany it, click on the video link at the right.
(Can you spot the cat that makes an unexpected appearance?)

“Family therapy teachers everywhere will find this an indispensable resource to help
their students as they work with clients in our contemporary culture.”
Victoria Dickerson, author of If Problems Talked: Narrative Therapy in Action

 

Dr. Ungar's BLOG on

 
Please see Dr. Ungar's new blog Nurturing Resilience on Psychology Today's website.


MEDIA HIGHLIGHTS

Dr. Ungar appears on TVO's Allan Gregg in Conversation to talk about The We Generation: Raising Socially Responsible Kids


REVIEWS OF
The
We Generation: Raising Socially Responsible Kids

Publishers Weekly

Can the “Me Generation” of baby boomers raise a “We Generation” of consciously compassionate, less self-involved kids? Canadian psychologist Ungar believes so and has written this guide for parents to help them foster in their offspring a spirit of volunteerism, a willingness to “give back” and a directive to do well by doing good. Each of these eight, action-oriented chapters offers anecdotes, self-evaluation tools, lists of activities and boxed tips as it addresses part of a plan for overcoming the problem of self-centered kids, starting with recognizing and learning that kids want to help and make changes; that compassion leads to connection, which leads to responsibility; how grandparents, neighbors and other parents can join forces; why parent-child affection is so important; how to guide kids spiritually and emotionally; how to avoid kids' isolation and anonymity in society; and strategies for generating excitement about being part of a wider world. Critical to all this is parents' commitment to model what they want to see in their kids. While this book may raise more questions than it answers—can kids who do community service only for college application profiles grow a conscience? or what about rebellious kids who do the opposite of their parents?—it is timely. Just as cardigan-clad Mr. Rogers embodied this concept in his PBS neighborhood, Ungar reframes it for today's families.

Read the original review here.

Blogcritics.org

Book Review: The We Generation: Raising Socially Responsible Kids by Michael Ungar
Blogcritics: November 1, 2009
By Sahar


The world has the potential to be amazing, but apart from glimmerings of awesomeness here and there, the overwhelming conditions are pretty terrible (sorry, Mother Earth). One of the reasons behind such a terrible state of affairs is the pervasive effects of both individualism and consumerism, which has led us away from what human nature is about: advancing both at the individual and at the community level.

Author Michael Ungar does a brilliant job of painting why, in a world that offers them more social connections in one year that a mere couple of generations ago would have had in an entire lifetime, children still feel alone, since they are inherently social creature with a desire to help others. He also does a brilliant job of explaining how parents (as well as teachers and coaches) can help children develop this inherent sense of altruism, enhanced by the shockingly contradictory reality offered by today’s "Me-society."

The fact of the matter is that parents work day and night to provide their children with tuition to a great school, all basic material amenities and some extras, like a TV, a computer and more toys that they can play with, but nothing can make up for the basic, human one-on-one contact that was such an important part of the lives of previous generations of children.

Ironically enough perhaps, the fact that these children only have an abundant number of superficial connections makes them want to reach out even more, while the decreasing number of deep in-person connections has robbed them of the environment they need to develop the skills and capacities to do so.

So what can parents do? Is everything that they do wrong?

Read the full review here.


 

Upcoming Events

Dr. Ungar will be speaking at the following events:

The Canadian Group Psychotherapy Foundation Annual Conference

Groupwork with At-Risk Youth
Sept. 29, 2010
Halifax, NS


Immigrant Youth Research Conference

Guelph University Department of Family Relations and Applied Nutrition
Sept. 30 - Oct. 1, 2010
Guelph, ON
schuang@uoguelph.ca
www.family.uoguelph.ca/
 

Second International Conference on Coping with Stress, Eslov, Sweden

Conference Keynote
October 6-7, 2010
UMEA University, Eslov, Sweden
Details at: www.umea-congress.se

ATEC Nova Scotia Teachers Association

Keynote address: School engagement and resilience.
October 22, 2010.
Details available from: bil@ns.sympatico.ca


National Association of Private Special Education Centers (NAPSEC)

Annual Conference, January 16-19, 2011.
Keynote Presentation.
Captiva Island, Florida.
Contact: www.napsec.org

Resilience-Why Bother?

Share, swap and debate resilience research and practice.
April 6-7.
University of Brighton, UK
Contact: Program Committee


Theory and Practice related to Resilience

Keynote address and workshop.
April 29, 2011.
sponsored by the Division of Child Psychiatry Education and Training Committee
McGill University, Montreal.
For information, click here.

Contact Dr. Ungar

For media inquiries, or to request a presentation by Dr. Ungar in your community, please contact:
Canada: Josh Glover (jglover@mcclelland.com) at (416) 598-1114 x319.
United States: Lissa Warren (lissa.warren@perseusbooks.com) at (617) 252-5212.
Australia and New Zealand: Kelly Fagan (kellyf@allenandunwin.com) at 61 2 8425 0184.