Using Behavior Interventions to Build Self-Regulation
Your Course Description
Behavioral Intervention
- The ability to self-regulate is not innate, rather youth learn to understand their emotions and practice managing their behavior with guidance from the caring adults in their lives.
- Behavior management is a critical component of youth work, and effective interventions are not a one-size-fits-all approach.
- You can use behavior interventions with youth to help them learn how to self-regulate while also building a relationship, and that relationship will play a huge role in your interventions over time.
Your Learning Objectives
- Incorporate behavior intervention strategies into the plan for helping youth learn to self-regulate
- Develop a repertoire of behavior interventions that range from “ignoring” to “interfering”
- Learn how to match the appropriate behavior intervention with the level of dysregulation and the temperament of the youth
- Develop your personal style of behavior management as a youth worker and better understand the role your relationship plays in all behavior intervention
- Be able to apply behavior intervention principles to groups, and understand the importance of managing behavior norms in a group setting
Your Course Details
- Completion Certificate
- Youth Worker Track
- This training will count as 1.5 CE hours for most boards. Please contact your board directly with questions on submitting. Course details for CE submissions provided.
Your Trainer

While Mr. Wilmes consults with and has worked with many treatment and correctional facilities, his most fundamental belief is that real growth and resilience primarily happens in the community and usually within the context of family, neighborhood, and school. Therefore, in the past decade he spends most of his professional energy working with schools, libraries, recreation centers, police departments, community activists/volunteers, tutoring and mentoring groups, and other community groups.
Mr. Wilmes received his undergraduate degree from Metro State University, and received his Master of Arts degree in Human Development from St. Mary’s University in Winona, MN.
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Your Skill-Building Objectives
Behavior Management
Encouraging behaviors that are better choices
Emotional Regulation
Helping young people to manage emotions
Relationship Building
Building trust through caring relationships
Resilience Building
Teaching coping strategies to overcome barriers
What YIPA members are saying
Fantastic! Honored our time, based in experience and theory. Super helpful, even for a veteran!
Such an applicable and relevant training for those of us working with middle school youth. One of the most valuable trainings I have had.
I can't wait to try the strategies I learned in this training.