Psychiatric medications have been taking the place of emotional bonding, effective socialization, and conscious parenting. The number of children taking medications for ADHD alone is now "well over three million," according to Wedge (2013). About five percent of all American children are also taking antidepressants (Wedge, 2013). Older students might be prescribed anti-anxiety medications too. Overreliance on medications in early childhood could cause any number of problems ranging from medication side effects, drug addiction, and even in some cases death. As Wedge (2013) points out, children whose emotions and cognitions are altered through medications also run the risk of growing up emotionally illiterate. This grounded theory research seeks a new non-pharmacological approach to working with children. The proposed theory seeks to promote emotional and spiritual growth in young children. The goal of this exploratory research will be to discover ways children's emotions can become integrated into their education, learning, and maturation. "Because psychotropic medications tend to mute feelings, medicated children may grow up unaware of who and what make them feel good and what makes them feel bad," (Wedge, 2013). The goal in this research would be to reconnect children with what makes them feel both good and bad, thereby also reconnecting parents and teachers with the ups...
"Spirituality" is the word used to describe the collection of processes and methods used to help children cope with challenging emotions, interfering thoughts that prevent concentration, peer problems, and behavioral issues. Distinct from religion, spirituality does not require deism but rather focuses on psychological growth, awareness, insight, and psychological equanimity.Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
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