What's CPS? 

If you've been struggling with your child or teenager's tantrums, meltdowns, explosions, implosions, or other negative behaviors, you are not alone and you are in the right place! Tried being firmer, more consistent, giving out stickers, unending time-outs, big rewards, yelling, giving up, and medication without success? Collaborative Problem Solving® is different!  

5-Minute Video Overview of CPS

20-Minute Video Overview of CPS

Copy of CPS Research Summary Slide.pdf

For More Research Information: thinkkids.org/research/

The 5-3-3 of CPS: A Summary

Collaborative Problem-Solving® (CPS) involves looking at youth with a different philosophy. CPS describes youth with challenging behaviors as having delays in the development of skills in 5 different areas which are needed to adaptively solve problems and make decisions in their lives. Just as a child with a Learning Disability in reading is not making a choice not to read, a child with a lagging skill development is not choosing to misbehave, have explosions, become destructive or aggressive, and continually behave in a way that prompts adults to behave in a way that creates more misery for the child. In other words, kids do well if they can. This is different than the common wisdom that “kids do well if they want to” which prescribes interventions focused on getting the child to “want to” do better (rewards and punishments). CPS teaches that explosive children are typically living a miserable and unhappy existence and do not lack the motivation to better. Rather, these children lack the skills to do better in their environment. Punishment and reward, without the development of the necessary skills to do better, are ineffective and create further frustrations for the child.


5 Skill Areas:


3 Plans: (To work with triggers and unmet expectations, in other words: 3 ways to deal with a problem.)


3 Steps of Plan B

Prethinking Plan B: Remember that you do not know where the plane is going to land when it takes off…

-A solution should: Be doable by both parties, realistic, and mutually satisfactory.

 


For More Information: ThinkKids.org