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BICA Book Club

Join us for our free book club hosted by Michael Wilson and Dr. Sheldon Braaten. We meet from 5-7 pm on the second Tuesday of each month in the Goldstein Memorial Library at the BICA office (Roseville, MN). Pizza and beverages are provided as well as clock-hour attendance certificates. 

 

Please contact us to RSVP and order books.

 

Behavioral Institute for Children and Adolescents

1711 County Road B W, Suite 110S

Roseville, MN  55113

651-484-5510

 

2012 Schedule

 

Jan. 10 Teaching with Books That Explain and Insipre
Feb. 7 Teaching Boys to Read
Mar. 13 The Bullying Prevention Handbook - 2nd Ed.
Apr. 17 Ashes to Gold
May 8 The Last Martin






January:

Teaching with Books That Explain and Inspire

moderated by Barbara Braaten

Books that Explain and Inspire

Participants are encouraged to bring a sample of their favorite book "that explains and inspires."

This month's bookclub will discuss how to integrate social emotional learning and reading instruction through use of a variety of books that address challenging issues.  Teachers, social workers, counselors and others often have to address issues that are difficult for children to understand. These issues often cause anxiety, stress and behavioral issues.

The discussion will cover how using literature supports both reading instruction and social-emotional learning. We will review several examples of books that address socially challenging issues such as bullying, divorce, school behaviors,separation/loss and accepting others.  A booklist will be available to those attending that provides the titles of books, the topics they address, appropriate grade levels, a short summary and costs. Most of the books discussed will be appropriate for kindergarten through eighth grade.

February:

Teaching Boys to Read

moderated by Dr. Steven Kaatz, Bethel University

Our February gathering will focus on Teaching Boys to Read. Dr. Kaatz will lead the discussion featuring the following two titles:

 

Teaching Boys Who Struggle in School: Strategies That Turn Underachievers Into Successful Learners
Teaching Boys Who Struggle in School

Rather than sounding false alarms about a genderwide crisis in boys’ academic achievement, here’s a book that cuts through the confusion to explain why some boys struggle in school and how you can effectively intervene without jeopardizing the achievements of other, more successful, learners (boys and girls). Drawing from large-scale studies, recent insights on social and learning-style factors, and lesson plans and anecdotes from real teachers, Cleveland equips you with a flexible and practical framework for addressing the needs of struggling male students that

  • Replaces underachieving boys’ negative attitudes about learning.

  • Reconnects boys to school, learning, and believing in being a competent learner.

  • Rebuilds learning skills that lead to success in school and in life.

  • Reduces the need for unproductive and distracting behaviors as a means of self-protection.

Instead of looking for a one-size-fits-all-boys solution, explore ways to identify and respond to specific reasons for underachievement among boys who fall behind and stay behind, boys who drop out too soon, and boys you just never seem to reach. This total solution helps you address

  • The influence of nonacademic factors on academic success.
  • Factors contributing to the experience of school.
  • How competence can enhance persistence.
  • How the classroom's physical arrangement affects a learner's success.

Each aspect of this book’s approach offers you a way to move underachieving boys from a position of weakness toward one of strength—giving them the tools to succeed in school and beyond.

Why Gender Matters: What Parents and Teachers Need to Know About the Emerging Science of Sex Differences
 Why Gender Matters

Are boys and girls really that different? Twenty years ago, doctors and researchers didn’t think so. Back then, most experts believed that differences in how girls and boys behave are mainly due to differences in how they were treated by their parents, teachers, and friends.

It's hard to cling to that belief today. An avalanche of research over the past twenty years has shown that sex differences are more significant and profound than anybody guessed. Sex differences are real, biologically programmed, and important to how children are raised, disciplined, and educated.

In Why Gender Matters, psychologist and family physician Dr. Leonard Sax leads parents through the mystifying world of gender differences by explaining the biologically different ways in which children think, feel, and act. He addresses a host of issues, including discipline, learning, risk taking, aggression, sex, and drugs, and shows how boys and girls react in predictable ways to different situations.

For example, girls are born with more sensitive hearing than boys, and those differences increase as kids grow up. So when a grown man speaks to a girl in what he thinks is a normal voice, she may hear it as yelling. Conversely, boys who appear to be inattentive in class may just be sitting too far away to hear the teacher—especially if the teacher is female.

Likewise, negative emotions are seated in an ancient structure of the brain called the amygdala. Girls develop an early connection between this area and the cerebral cortex, enabling them to talk about their feelings. In boys these links develop later. So if you ask a troubled adolescent boy to tell you what his feelings are, he often literally cannot say.

Dr. Sax offers fresh approaches to disciplining children, as well as gender-specific ways to help girls and boys avoid drugs and early sexual activity. He wants parents to understand and work with hardwired differences in children, but he also encourages them to push beyond gender-based stereotypes.

A leading proponent of single-sex education, Dr. Sax points out specific instances where keeping boys and girls separate in the classroom has yielded striking educational, social, and interpersonal benefits. Despite the view of many educators and experts on child-rearing that sex differences should be ignored or overcome, parents and teachers would do better to recognize, understand, and make use of the biological differences that make a girl a girl, and a boy a boy.

Related Titles:
The Minds of Boys
The Minds of Boys - Saving Our Sons from Falling Behind in School and Life

 Teaching the Male Brain
Teaching the Male Brain: How Boys Think, Feel and Learn in School
 

March:

The Bullying Prevention Handbook, 2nd Ed.

moderated by John Hoover, author

The Bullying Prevention Handbook

The Bullying Prevention Handbook is a comprehensive, step-by-step bullying intervention model for understanding, preventing, and reducing the day-to-day teasing and harassment attributed to bullying.

New chapters focus on cyberbullying; bullying of gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender students; and the importance of bringing a multicultural perspective to antibullying. Includes a CD with reproducible survey instruments, screening checklists, and handouts.

 

Review:

A bully can make a student's life miserable and make them hate school. "The Bullying Prevention Handbook: A Guide for Principles, Teachers, and Counselors" is a guide for school administrators to deal with the inevitable act of bullying and teasing in their schools. Dealing with both the bully and the victim through counseling is important, as are discussing things with both sets of parents, and how to reverse the damage caused by the act, as well as simply discouraging the act through education. It covers the wide range of types, from elementary school recess about a kid's large ears to cyber-bullying, to far more serious taunting of LGBT students in high school. "The Bullying Prevention Handbook" comes with a companion CD-ROM of extra material, making it a must for any responsible school administrator.


John HooverJohn Hoover
, PhD, is a professor of special education at St. Cloud State University in Minnesota, where he has also served as interim associate dean of the College of Education. He consults for numerous school organizations on maintaining safe, positive learning environments. Dr. Hoover is a seasoned presenter renowned for his expertise in managing behavior in schools and working with students with special needs. He has served as president of the Southeast South Dakota Activity Center and the Leadership Round Table for John Goodlad’s National Network for Educational Renewal at SCSU.

An authority in his field, Dr. Hoover has coauthored several books on preventing aggressive student behavior. His work is frequently published in a variety of professional journals. He is affiliated with the American Association on Mental Retardation, Council for Exceptional Children, and Phi Delta Kappa. Dr. Hoover is a member of the advisory panel of the St. Cloud School District Safe and Drug Free Schools Project, and he serves as chair or board member for a variety of community service organizations.

Dr. Hoover earned a bachelor of science in elementary education and psychology, with a minor in special education from SCSU, a master of science in special education from the University of Illinois, and a doctorate in special education from Southern Illinois University.

April:

Ashes to Gold

moderated by Brad Fern and Tom Lutz, authors

 Ashes to Gold

Adolescence can be a challenging period for youths, especially in today’s world, where the ancient rites of passage that societies once used to turn their boys into men have disappeared. In an in-depth analysis of the Grimm Brothers' fairytale "The Devil's Sooty Brother," therapists and teachers Brad Fern and Tom Lutz provide a practical and mythic outline for the journey from adolescence to maturity for young men.

 

Review:

"The perfect healing story for one of the most troubling and intransigent social dilemmas of our time, that of juvenile delinquents, or 'lost boys.' From Ashes to Gold reminds us that there's nothing so powerful and transformative as a good story well told." --Eric Utne, founder, Utne Reader

Filled with true life anecdotes, mythic images, and hard won experience, From Ashes to Gold is essential reading for anyone in the business of working with youth." --Martin Shaw, author, A Branch from the Lightning Tree: Ecstatic Myth and the Grace in Wildness

Brad Fern and Tom Lutz uncover the real human beings who lie hidden behind intimidating disguises of toughness and contempt. Here is the story of why and how 'agents of the Dark Man' mentor troubled adolescents. There are young people all over the world crying out for you to read this book and understand its message." --Bob Roberts, author, My Soul Said to Me: An Unlikely Journey Behind the Walls of Justice

 

Brad FernBrad Fern is a psychotherapist in private practice in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He has been involved in mythopoetic men’s work since 1986. He is the co-author of Ashes to Gold: The Alchemy of Mentoring the Delinquent Boy and Songs of My Families.

Tom LutzTom Lutz has worked with adolescents and families for thirty-three years. He has been the clinical director of several Minnesota sex-offender programs and correctional institutions. He is in private practice in Hastings, Minnesota.Show More

May:

The Last Martin

moderated by Jonathan Friesen, author

The Last Martin

There's always a Martin. One Martin. Martin Boyle already has plenty to worry about. His germaphobic mother keeps him home from school if she hears so much as a sneeze, and his father is always off somewhere reenacting old war battles. Julia, the most beautiful girl in school, won't even speak to Martin, and the gym teacher is officially out to get him. Which is why Martin really doesn't need this curse hanging over his head. On a trip to the family cemetery, Martin wanders among the tombstones of his ancestors and discovers a disturbing pattern: when one Martin is born, the previous Martin dies. And---just his luck---Martin's aunt is about to give birth to a baby boy, who will, according to tradition, be named Martin. Martin must find a way to break the curse, but every clue seems to lead to a dead end. And time is running out.

Review:

Gr 5-7--Martin Boyle was 'born dead,' his lifeless body placed on his mother. Suddenly the baby moves. From that moment on, his mother does everything in her power to protect him from anything that could possibly harm him. In fact, she crosses over into paranoia and obsessive behavior. Martin's friend Charley is used to him getting on the bus each day with his portable air bag strapped to his chest and his mother running to school to check on his safety. During an annual trip to visit the old family cemetery, the boy realizes a strange correlation among the Martins in the family. It is tradition that the first boy be named Martin, but each time a new Martin is born, the old one must die. His Aunt Jenny is pregnant with a boy, due shortly. Martin knows that his days are numbered so his actions become reckless, which lands him in detention and gives him a chance to get to know his crush, Julia. He has been writing a story about a white knight, a black knight, and a princess, which Julia loves. The story symbolizes an escape that both Julia, a foster child, and Martin crave. The crisis of Martin's impending death is the joining factor in this odd hodgepodge of characters, including Poole, a spirited but unkempt homeless boy. They form a bond in trying to keep Martin alive. This is a sobering read in many respects as many of the adults are directly responsible for the emotional baggage these children carry. Julia fights against it, Poole runs away, Martin's sister cowers, but Martin triumphs. Minor characters such as the physical education teacher who employs completely illegal means of punishment will further fuel readers' angst. This is a great choice for discussions.--Julie Shatterly, W.A. Bess Elementary School, Gastonia, NC -- School Library Journal Show More

 

Jonathan Friesen

Jonathan Friesen is an award-winning author, international speaker, and storyteller who received the diagnosis of Tourette Syndrome later in life. He is not alone—TS or its symptoms affect several members of his family. Jonathan currently serves on the board of the Minnesota Tourette Syndrome Association. He’s the author of five novels including Rush (Penguin, 2010) and The Last Martin (Zondervan/HarperCollins 2011), which explore mental health issues. Jonathan has numerous award-winning articles to his credit. His personal experience with Tourette’s inspired him to write the highly acclaimed novel Jerk, California (Penguin, 2008), winner of the American Library Association’s 2009 Schneider Award—“Best Book for Teens.”

Jonathan spent sixteen years teaching in traditional classroom, special education, and university settings, and now travels the country sharing his expertise and heart for disability issues with audiences of all ages.  Engaging and passionate, Jonathan’s presentations have touched students and educators, parents and professionals across the country.  When he’s not writing, speaking, or teaching, Jonathan hangs out with his family on a small farm in central Minnesota.

 

About our Bookstore

BICA sells books, videos, games, training resources, presentation equipment, assessment tools & tests, multimedia and other professional materials at a discount.

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Books That Explain and Inspiretm

We offer products from more than 100 publishers and manufacturers. Below is a list of most publishers and links to their online catalogs for detailed product information. Call us or use our order form for a 10% discount on most products plus free shipping on orders over $100. If you need assistance in locating a product or you are interested in ordering from a publisher not listed, please contact us.


 


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