Crossing the bridge from childhood to adulthood has never been so daunting. The time of adolescence is longer than ever and yet society today offers little support in understanding or facilitating this transition. This course is designed to be used by parents, grandparents, teachers, administrators, professionals – anyone who desires to make sense of adolescence. Parents of pre- teens will find this course invaluable as preparation for what lies ahead.
Making Sense of Adolescence is a two-part course composed of fourteen sessions in total. The first part –The Seven Rites of Passage – consists of ten sessions. The second part of the course – Adolescence & Sexuality – consists of four sessions and can be registered for separately at a later time if preferred. Part I, however, is the prerequisite for Part II.
Watch a short video preview of this course:
Join us for a Live & Faculty-Guided version of Making Sense of Adolescence - a transformative learning experience where you will be supported by experienced faculty members Robin Brook-Sherriff and Lisa Weiner.
This Live & Faculty-Guided format combines Dr. Neufeld’s comprehensive video lectures with real-time support sessions, where you’ll have the opportunity to ask questions, discuss key insights, and explore practical applications in a supportive environment. These interactive sessions are designed to deepen your understanding of adolescent development and empower you with the tools to guide the young people in your care.
Whether you’re a parent, educator, or professional, this course offers invaluable insights into the complexities of adolescence, helping you foster stronger connections and provide the guidance adolescents need to thrive.
Spaces are limited to maintain a personalized experience, so don’t miss this chance to engage directly with Dr. Neufeld’s teachings and gain real-time support from our dedicated faculty.
Course Start Date: January 30th, 2025
Duration: 10 weeks
Thursdays 1:00 PM - 2:00 PM Pacific
Price: 275 CAD
Robin Brook-Sherriff offers Making Sense of Adolescence and Adolescence and Sexuality to engaged parent groups, as well as specialized presentations on adolescent sexuality for parents and caregivers of teens. With her extensive experience in supporting teenagers as they navigate the complexities of a hyper-sexualized and peer-oriented culture, Robin brings a unique blend of practical insight and the Neufeld paradigm to her work. Her approach to this sensitive and challenging topic is not only insightful but often infused with humor, creating a welcoming space for open dialogue and deeper understanding.
Lisa Weiner is a nurse practitioner, parent consultant, and esteemed faculty member of the Neufeld Institute. Deeply immersed in Dr. Neufeld’s attachment-based developmental approach, Lisa has found that this paradigm not only transformed her own parenting but also deepened her understanding of herself, other adults, and the remarkable journey of human development. Her work is driven by a genuine appreciation for the complexities and wonders of growth, and she is dedicated to sharing these insights with others.
This course is also available in two alternative formats: Self-Paced and Lecture-Only.
Includes access to Dr. Gordon Neufeld’s video lectures, downloadable materials, and replays of previous faculty-facilitated support sessions to help guide your independent learning.
Price: 275 CAD
Provides the same comprehensive video lectures without additional support, which is ideal for those who prefer insights without interactive elements.
Price: 165 CAD
The key to making sense of the adolescent is to understand the underlying developmental dynamics as well as the attachment needs of the adolescent. These needs are typically underestimated due to the physical maturity of adolescents and the resistance to dependence that can result from becoming prematurely attached to peers. Adding to the confusion is the fact that there is more than one developmental pathway to adulthood and societal integration.
Adolescence literally means ‘growing into maturity’. An adolescent is neither child nor adult and therein lies much of the difficulty, the turbulence, the confusion and the challenge. They need us, yet need to not need us. We are their best bet, yet their instincts are to resist us. Unlike primitive cultures, our highly complex society requires a lengthy adolescence with very few rites of passage. The task of turning children into adults has never been more daunting!
Nature’s part in creating grown-ups is to equip them for adult functioning around the time of puberty, ready or not. These changes create their own rites of passage that the adolescent must negotiate to truly mature. Unfortunately, growing up is not a given; not all adolescents embrace their developmental destiny. The most common temptation of adolescence is to replace parents with peers instead of becoming one’s own person. The most common mistake of adults is to back off prematurely. As long as an adolescent is not yet viable as a separate being, he or she is meant to be attached to those responsible for him or her.
These rites of passage create challenges for parents and teachers as well: the adolescent’s new found idealism makes them critical of us; their developmental self-absorption makes them deaf to our perspective; their acute allergy to coercion makes them rather difficult to direct.
Our challenge as adults is to help our teens cross the bridge from childhood to adulthood, to encourage them to embrace their developmental destiny and to ultimately shoehorn them into adult society. Meanwhile, we have the day-to-day challenge of parenting and teaching them, of guiding and directing them, of shielding them from stress.
Adolescence is truly the womb of adulthood and those enveloped in supportive adult relationships have the greatest chance of successfully negotiating this tumultuous time. The challenge is not to treat them as if they were children nor to retreat from them as if they were adults. Learning to ‘dance’ with an adolescent commands the very best in us.
This material is relevant to anyone who is involved or will be involved with teenagers: parents, grandparents, teachers, counselors, youth workers, family workers, therapists, social workers, and psychologists.
This course can be used for professional development for teachers, continuing education for helping professionals, and staff training for youth programs.
This course is also appropriate for parents of preteens to prepare them for the transition.
The objective of this course is to understand adolescents from the inside out. Every adolescent is an individual, but some typical dynamics affect all adolescents. Understanding these dynamics can provide the keys to dealing with problems that may arise.
Some of the topics addressed include:
• the psychological changes at puberty that impact adolescents and those who parent and work with them
• how to deal with the premature loss of power and influence with an adolescent
• how to recognize when rebellion is healthy or a result of adults being replaced by peers
• the psychological temptations faced by adolescents on their journey to maturity
• how parents and teachers can avoid premature or forced retirement
• how to preserve or restore one’s rightful place in an adolescent’s life
• how to differentiate between relationship problems and behaviour problems in the adolescent
• how to hold on without holding them back
Session 1 - Crossing the bridge: adolescence in perspective
Session 2 - Two paths diverge: conformity versus individuality
Session 3 - Walking through aloneness and sadness: the
necessary road to individuation
Session 4 - Taking a wrong turn: when peers replace adults
Session 5 - The counterwill storm: how to survive teen resistance
Session 6 - Why adolescents need to feel more than ever
Session 7 - Becoming tempered: the key to adolescent balance and stability
Session 8 - Why adolescents need to play more than ever
Session 9 - Reclaiming our youth: how to hold, or win back, their hearts
Session 10 - Becoming a sexual being: the pursuit of proximity in another dimension