Children's Grief:
Retelling the Death Story As An Active Agent

Traditional theories of childhood grief have largely relied on stage-based developmental frameworks, often linking children’s understanding of death to age-related cognitive capacities.  Such approaches may imply that children grieve in predictable, normative ways, thereby overlooking the child’s individuality, relational context, and lived experience.  This module challenges these assumptions by introducing a Transactional Developmental Model of childhood grief, which conceptualizes children as active agents rather than passive recipients of loss.

​Central to this training is an in-depth case study based on a 45-minute video recording of a clinical play therapy session with a five-year-old child and her father following the death of the child’s mother shortly after childbirth of her younger sister.  The video will be viewed in segments and regularly paused to invite reflection, discussion, and clinical inquiry.  Learners are guided to observe how children express meaning through play, narrative, and relational interaction, and how adult caregivers can be thoughtfully involved in supporting the reconstruction of the death story.  Using the Transactional Developmental Model as a guiding framework, the case study illustrates how children’s grief unfolds dynamically within relationships and contexts.  Issues of diversity are addressed by attending to family systems, relational positioning, cultural assumptions about children and death, and by explicitly centering the child’s own voice and agency throughout the clinical process.

Note:  This 3-hour CE module focuses on topics related to psychological practice, education, or research other than application of psychological assessment and/or intervention methods that are supported by contemporary scholarship grounded in established research procedures.

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

  • Describe the core principles of the Transactional Developmental Model of childhood grief and how it differs from stage-based developmental approaches;
  • Distinguish between normative, age-based interpretations of children’s grief and a transactional, context-sensitive understanding of children as active agents;
  • Identify key indicators of children’s agency, meaning-making, and emotional regulation as expressed through play, narrative, and relational interaction during a video-recorded clinical session; and
  • Apply insights gained from guided video observation and group discussion to inform clinical decision-making when supporting children and families following traumatic loss.

Earn 3 Continuing Education (CE) Credits

Portland Institute for Loss and Transition is approved by the American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists.  Portland Institute for Loss and Transition maintains responsibility for this program and its content.

Portland Institute for Loss and Transition, [Provider number 1954], is approved to offer social work continuing education by the Association of Social Work Boards (ASWB) Approved Continuing Education (ACE) program.  Organizations, not individual courses, are approved as ACE providers.  State and provincial regulatory boards have the final authority to determine whether an individual course may be accepted for continuing education credit.  Portland Institute for Loss and Transition maintains responsibility for this course.  ACE provider approval period: 09/09/2025-09/09/2028.

Earn 1 Credit for Case Studies toward
Certification in Meaning-Focused Grief Therapy
or Certification in Family-Focused Grief Therapy
Offered by the Portland Institute.

 
 

PROGRAM SCHEDULE

This program contains the following video segments:

  • Grief in Early Childhood:  The Sensorimotor and Preoperational Stages (42 mins)
  • From Cases to Core Principles:  The Concrete and Formal Operational Stages (44 mins)
  • Children as Active Agents:  A Transactional Model (47 mins)
  • Growing Up with Grief:  A Case Study in Grief Therapy (53 mins)

Children's Grief:
Retelling the Death Story As An Active Agent

USD$99 for 3-hour module / USD$124 with CE Credits

GRIEF TRAINING FACULTY​

Lies Scaut

BSW, MFT
Limburg, Belgium

a Belgian social worker, marital and family therapist, and hypnotherapist with extensive training in complex trauma, grief, and themes of separation.  She has developed a series of creative, arts-based techniques for grief counseling with children, families, teachers, and helping professionals.  Lies has more than a decade of experience in crisis and disaster response in schools and communities and has authored several books on understanding grief and loss in children and families, supporting children undergoing cancer treatment and palliative care, helping children cope with anxiety in times of war and terrorism, and answering children’s questions about death in their own language.  She coordinates and teaches the Postgraduate Program in Grief and Loss Counseling at PXL University of Applied Sciences and Arts, maintains an active private practice, and provides training for grief counselors and first responders in several countries.  She was the first professional student to be awarded the Certification in Grief Therapy as Meaning Reconstruction by the Portland Institute.

 

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