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Supportive relationships and active skill-building strengthen the foundations of resilience National Scientific Council on the Developing Child

By: National Scientific Council on the Developing Child.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Working paper.Publisher: Cambridge, MA : Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University, 2015Description: electronic document (16 pages); PDF file: 524.48 KB.Subject(s): ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCES | CHILD NEGLECT | CHILD PROTECTION | CHILD WELFARE | INTERVENTION | PARENTING | SOCIAL POLICY | PROTECTIVE FACTORS | RESILIENCE | RISK FACTORS | SUPPORT SERVICES | CHILD ABUSEOnline resources: Click here to access online | Resilience series Working paper: 13, 2015Summary: Decades of research in the behavioral and social sciences have produced substantial evidence that children who do well despite serious hardship have had at least one stable and committed relationship with a supportive parent, caregiver, or other adult. These relationships buffer children from developmental disruption and help them build key capacities, such as the ability to adapt, that enable them to respond to adversity and thrive. The combination of supportive relationships, adaptive skill-building, and positive experiences constitute the foundation of what is commonly called resilience. This Working Paper from the National Scientific Council on the Developing Child explains how protective factors in the social environment and highly responsive biological systems interact to produce resilience, and discusses strategies that promote healthy development in the face of significant adversity. (from the website). Use the Resilience series link to find videos on: What is resilience; The science of resilience; and How resilience is built and other resources related to the research in this paper. Record #4632
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Working paper: 13, 2015

Decades of research in the behavioral and social sciences have produced substantial evidence that children who do well despite serious hardship have had at least one stable and committed relationship with a supportive parent, caregiver, or other adult. These relationships buffer children from developmental disruption and help them build key capacities, such as the ability to adapt, that enable them to respond to adversity and thrive. The combination of supportive relationships, adaptive skill-building, and positive experiences constitute the foundation of what is commonly called resilience. This Working Paper from the National Scientific Council on the Developing Child explains how protective factors in the social environment and highly responsive biological systems interact to produce resilience, and discusses strategies that promote healthy development in the face of significant adversity. (from the website). Use the Resilience series link to find videos on: What is resilience; The science of resilience; and How resilience is built and other resources related to the research in this paper. Record #4632