Through Learning With Dr. B, individuals and families get psychological education for well-being and life.
I believe that psychological education can support our efforts to change behaviors. It can prompt insights, deliver clear understanding and “aha” moments for people seeking help for themselves or a child. As a psychologist, I look and live for these moments.
These breakthrough moments are also why I decided to create online curriculum — to help people understand what is going wrong in their world and fix it. Through my separate company website, LearningWithDrB.com, I literally may help anyone, anywhere, not just those in my private practice.
It’s been my experience throughout my career helping others that only with the right understanding and the right information will a person’s ability to change take root. Knowledge gained through psychological education could build momentum for change.
Of course, my curriculum is not intended to replace in-person therapy, but it does provide a solid, issue-specific foundation on which to move forward.
My first course covers an issue I see often in my own practice -- anxiety and depression. The course is called Something Is Up With My Kid. In it, I educate parents about psychological risks of interactive screen time for kids of all ages, and what to do about it.
Click here if you'd like to get six free video clips from that course.
I believe that psychological education can support our efforts to change behaviors. It can prompt insights, deliver clear understanding and “aha” moments for people seeking help for themselves or a child. As a psychologist, I look and live for these moments.
These breakthrough moments are also why I decided to create online curriculum — to help people understand what is going wrong in their world and fix it. Through my separate company website, LearningWithDrB.com, I literally may help anyone, anywhere, not just those in my private practice.
It’s been my experience throughout my career helping others that only with the right understanding and the right information will a person’s ability to change take root. Knowledge gained through psychological education could build momentum for change.
Of course, my curriculum is not intended to replace in-person therapy, but it does provide a solid, issue-specific foundation on which to move forward.
My first course covers an issue I see often in my own practice -- anxiety and depression. The course is called Something Is Up With My Kid. In it, I educate parents about psychological risks of interactive screen time for kids of all ages, and what to do about it.
Click here if you'd like to get six free video clips from that course.