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Bibliotherapy

Southern Medical Journal, 1980
Bibliotherapy is the use of any literary work in the treatment of physical or emotional problems. It is practiced by a variety of professionals including librarians, psychoanalysts, educators, and behavioral scientists. Patrons, outpatients, inpatients, students, clients and parishioners are some of the participants in bibliotherapy sessions.
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Bibliotherapy

Intervention in School and Clinic, 2006
Educators and school librarians today are facing new challenges that go well beyond the traditional expectation of teaching reading, writing, and arithmetic. These challenges take many forms. Many students enter the educational system lacking the necessary social, emotional, and academic prerequisites to be successful. Educational settings are becoming
Katherine E. Cook   +2 more
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Bibliotherapy for Hospitalized Children

Southern Medical Journal, 1984
Allegorical stories can be used to help children cope with the worries and fears precipitated by illness, medical procedures, and hospitalizations. They supplement explicit discussions of illness and preparation for procedures and hospitalization. Stories with appropriate symbolic themes are readily available in children's literature.
A, Fosson, E, Husband
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Bibliotherapy

Primary Teacher Update, 2014
Lynn Sear and Anthony Legon from www.theliteracytree.co.uk suggest books for classes or pupils with specific needs or preferences. This month: Grimmer tales.
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BIBLIOTHERAPY AS AN ADJUVANT IN PSYCHOTHERAPY

American Journal of Psychiatry, 1948
Bibliotherapy may be described simply as a means of psychotherapy through reading. It is not something new or recently discovered. Reading has been used for centuries to disseminate new ideas, alter old attitudes and activities, and initiate new ones.
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Bibliotherapy

2021
John T. Pardeck, Jean A. Pardeck
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The goals of bibliotherapy

The Arts in Psychotherapy, 1980
It is almost the perfect poem for bibliotherapy. And everyone knows it well enough to relate to it. “The Road Not Taken” by Robert Frost has just about everything going for it: visual imagery, the pronoun “I” so we cannot escape looking at ourselves as we read, “telling” someone else about it, and the knowledge everyone has that whatever choice was ...
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Bibliotherapy and graphic medicine

2018
While most bibliotherapy activities focus on the use of written text, whether in the form of novels, poetry or self-help books, in recent years there has been a growing interest in the use of graphic novels and comics as a form of bibliotherapy. Although graphic novels are, perhaps, most often seen as a library resource for teenagers or less literate ...
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Bibliotherapie

Verhaltenstherapie, 2005
Katja Grahlmann, Michael Linden
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BIBLIOTHERAPY

AJN, American Journal of Nursing, 1950
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