

Dr. Gillian Boudreau, Ph.D., RYT
May 11, 2015
Gain an understanding of how to approach facilitating social time for adolescents. This workshop covers pre-teaching around hidden rules and expectations and finding activities that can be enjoyable for teens with varying interests to do together. Also addressed are family-based strategies for assisting teens in dealing with the emotional intensity that goes along with adolescent peer interactions.
Dr. Gillian Boudreau is a licensed clinical psychologist and a licensed school psychologist. She has spent years as a clinician in therapeutic and hospital- based schools in New York City and developed and directed a school-based initiative in Vermont providing intensive behavioral programming in public elementary schools. Dr. Boudreau currently practices at the Vermont Center for Integrative Therapy. She frequently works with children and adolescents on the autism spectrum with a focus on fostering understanding and effective communication between these individuals and their family and community. Mindfulness and its utility in reducing anxiety and supporting healthful internal systems and family systems is a primary focus of her clinical work.
Hidden rules and expectations in a teen hangout
Helping teens choose successful activities
Family-based strategies for risk and vulnerability inherent in adolescent social learning
Fostering Parent Community
Finding parents of teens with shared interests
Opening lines of communication about facilitating hangouts between teens
Supporting one another in tolerating the stress of adolescent social worlds
Self-Questions for Teens
What activities do I like doing on my own?
What activities do I like or would I consider doing in a group?
What are some new groups or activities that I could start myself?
Are there regular groups happening that I already know about and would want to join?
When Visiting Others
Talking to peers’ parents
Negotiating activities with peers
How to self-advocate during a hangout (asking for the bathroom etc)
What resources are typically available versus off limits to guests and how to ask if confused
How to take a break
How to end the hangout
When Hosting Others
What it means to have a guest and make someone feel welcome
Determining what materials would be available for the guest and considering putting away those materials that teens would want to have off limits
Handling requests from guests (bathroom/snack, etc)
Negotiating what activities to do and in what order
How to take a break if needed
How to end the hangout if needed
When In The Community
Meeting up
How school/house rules and community rules are the same/different
Inviting versus being invited; who chooses the activity
How to take a break if needed
How to end the hangout if needed
Expectations about staying in communication with parents
Interest-driven
Can be done in a parallel or interactive way, or somewhere in between
Familiar to the teen
Not too over-stimulating
Does not hinge on reciprocal conversation
Gaming
Museums or shops centered on a particular interest
Movies
Physical activities or sports teens are already comfortable with
Screen time
Determine with your child what they are most interested in
Consider what networks are available for your child to introduce a new group to others with similar interests (school, neighborhood, etc)
Consider social media or online notice boards to announce the group
Discuss with school teams how learning these skills of group creation/promotion could potentially be a part of your child’s school life and could foster a true sense of belonging and community involvement
It is important to identify and address parental fears, concerns, and expectations around social success and belonging for teens
It is important to remember that adolescence is a typically socially difficult time for almost everyone. The tendency can be to protect teens from social difficulty, and certainly teens need to be protected from bullying and other forms of social violence. Social rejection and difficulty, however, is a painful but necessary part of adolescent development so that teens can learn who they really are, what they really need, and how to find others who will like them for who they are.
It is important to remind teens that even if they experience a social rejection or slight they are still worthy of caring and belonging. It is also important to remind teens what a universal experience this is in adolescence.
Enriching social lives take many forms
Teens may not feel a strong drive for hangouts
Teens on the spectrum may do better with either younger or older individuals compared with their direct peers
Teens on the spectrum may get along better with adults than with peers