Thursday 1 January 2015

A Review Of November Parent Choice Programs

Posted by Unknown at 14:40
By Saleem Rana


Host Lon Woodbury and Cohost Mary Romero of The Woodbury Report radio program --which is hosted show on K4HD.com--invited 3 guests to share the latest news about their therapeutic programs. Ken Huey is the Founder and Senior VP of CALO, Dr. Rick Meeves is the CEO of Aspiro/Outback Therapeutic Expeditions, and Kathy Rex is Founder of BlueFire Wilderness Therapy.

Lon Woodbury, the host of the radio show, is an Independent Educational Consultant who has worked with families and struggling teens since 1984. He is the founder of Struggling Teens, Inc., the publisher of Woodbury Reports, and an author on numerous books about parenting at risk-teens.

The co-host of the show, Mary Romero, has authored several books, the latest being, "The Breakdown of an All-American Family." She has also written extensively for a number of parenting websites. Mary runs her own business called Live-Coaching where she serves as an active Life Coach. In addition, Mary is a consumer advocate.

Top 3 Parent Choice Interviews

The founder of CALO, the Change Academy Lake of the Ozarks, was the first person interviewed. He is currently serving the school as its Senior VP.

CALO--who specialize in working with adopted children who have serious attachment disorders and reactive attachment disorders. They recently opened up two new houses on five acres of adjoining property. Preteens are children between the ages of ten to thirteen years of age. Those with reactive attachment disorder are intense. Although, they are not violent, they require a large staff to regulate their behavior. "These children, "said Ken, "need one on one care. They crave touch, love and care. They like to rock in the dual rocking chairs and to sit and talk and to learn to connect and trust."

The next guest interviewed was Dr. Rick Meeves. He is the new CEO of Aspiro and Outback Therapeutic Expeditions. He came on the radio show to talk about how the two programs work independently of each other.

While both would follow an expeditionary model, the emphasis for each one would be slightly different. Aspiro would offer an adventure-style program while Outback would offer a wilderness-style program. It was possible that Outback would soon offer "New Age" features.

Kathy Rex was the last and final guest. She has founded a school in southern Idaho, called BlueFlame Wilderness Therapy.

Students between the age of 13 to 17 years could choose from a variety of outdoor adventures or wilderness experiences. The program was focused on a single gender group at a time--it was not coed. Students lived in a yurt for three days and learned arts and crafts.




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