This document provides information and guidance for supporting children under five years old when someone important has died. It discusses that young children may not understand death fully but will react to changes in their environment and caregivers. It offers suggestions for explaining death to young children in simple terms and maintaining routines. It also provides advice for preparing young children for funerals and allowing them to express grief through play, questions and spending time with caregivers.
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Module 3 Death & Dying Death in Childhood Adult Assu.docxkendalfarrier
Module 3 Death & Dying
Death in Childhood
Adult Assumptions
About Children and Death
• Children are seldom given the opportunity in
family discussions to talk about death-related
topics
• Adults often have their own fears, doubts, and
conflicts, which often get communicated to their
children
• Freud thought that parents wanted to believe
that their children live in a fairy-tale world safe
from the reality of death
Lessons from the
Research Case Histories
• It is the death of particular people or animals that
enlists the child’s concern
• Death-related experiences, attitudes and
behaviors are part of the intimate flow of life
between children and their parents
• There may be several different orientations
toward death within the same household
Lessons from the
Research Case Histories
• Parents whose own discomfort interferes with
their responses to their children’s death-related
curiosity are likely to perpetuate these anxieties
for another generation
• There is now a transitional generation of parents
who are trying to communicate in an open
manner with their children, although their own
experience was of family silence about death
Stages of Death Comprehension
in Childhood (Nagy)
• Research conducted in 1948/1969, involving
378 children, ages 3 to 10
• Stage 1, ages 3 to 5, Focus on Absence
• Very curious about death and death-related items, like
coffins, the cemetery, and also the funeral
• Death is a continuation of life but in a diminished form
(such as diminished sight or hearing)
• Death is temporary
• Death is departure and separation
• Death aroused anxiety
Stages of Death Comprehension
in Childhood (Nagy)
• Stage 2, ages 5 to 9, Focus on Finality
• Death is represented as a person
• Death is dangerous, invisible, like a skeleton, and
comes out in the dark
• Death has mysterious power
• Belief that death might still be eluded (for example,
you might get killed crossing the street, but not if you
look both ways and be careful about crossing the
street)
• Death is not recognized as universal and personal
Stages of Death Comprehension
in Childhood (Nagy)
• Stage 3, beginning about age 9, Focus on
Personal, Universal, and Inevitable
• Realizes that death is final
• Realizes that death will come to him or her as well
• Discussion of death has a more adult quality
• May add a moral, poetic, or religious dimension
Additional Research Findings
• Children with superior intellectual and verbal ability
demonstrated more advanced death concepts than
others their same age
• No difference in death concepts based on SES
• Gender: boys are more likely to depict violent deaths
than girls
• Younger children seem to focus on separation anxiety
• Older children see death as scary and begin to use
symbols to represent death concepts
Cultural Influences on Children’s
Concepts of Death
• U.S. ch.
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Working with Minors
Adolescent Case Scenario
Dana starting seeing you, her counsellor when she was 14 years old. Initially, her sessions were related to anxiety that began to peak at the time her parents separated. Dana continued to see you for over six months. As time went on, Dana began to disclose drug taking behaviour and sexual activity. She told you that she would occasionally smoke marijuana with her friends at parties and has protected sex with her boyfriend.
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U nit 6 children therapy because its_for_the_kidsBluecare
Working with Minors
Adolescent Case Scenario
Dana starting seeing you, her counsellor when she was 14 years old. Initially, her sessions were related to anxiety that began to peak at the time her parents separated. Dana continued to see you for over six months. As time went on, Dana began to disclose drug taking behaviour and sexual activity. She told you that she would occasionally smoke marijuana with her friends at parties and has protected sex with her boyfriend.
Dana confides that she really appreciates having you to talk to because no other adult understands what it’s like to be a teenager. She is also really happy that you haven’t told her Mum or Dad anything about the drugs or sex.
In this session, Dana discloses that she has broken up with her boyfriend. She also tells you that a friend-of-a-friend is organising heroin for them to try at a party on the weekend. She is really looking forward to it and says it will be her first try of a drug other than marijuana. She is also pleased that there’ll be “lots of new boys there” as they are announcing the party on Facebook.
Facing Bereavement for YouthFrancesca Balzano, Lily Spinelli, .docxssuser454af01
Facing Bereavement for Youth
Francesca Balzano, Lily Spinelli, Molly Stedman
Why Topic Was Selected
BECAUSE WE’RE METAL.
On a more serious note, we all have an interest in helping those who are facing the loss of loved ones, specifically children and adolescents.
Molly
Helpful Information
Honesty is best when discussing death, especially with children
Young children need less elaborate explanations of death but more assurance that the person dying loves them
Childhood development:
3-5 years old: deny death exists
6-9 years old: believe death exists but only happens to some people
9 years old & up: death is final and universal
p. 584 in the textbook
Molly
Design Idea
Target children affected by death and dying in a support group setting
Children 6-18 years old
Older children serve as mentors
6-10, 11-14, 15-18
Advertise in hospitals: oncology clinics especially, referral by nurses/doctors, posters on walls
Headquarters separate from hospital: super comfy, floors for each age group, Sunday sessions
Workers: child psychologists, grief counselors, hospice workers, chaplain/religious counselors
Fran
Design Process
Discovery
Interpretation
Ideation
Experimentation
Evolution
Fran
Guanzhuo
Guanzhuo
Lily
Lily
Discovery: I have a challenge, how do I approach it?
As we know, death is inevitable, but we must find a way to cope with it. It’s not easy for children to develop successful coping mechanisms and skills to deal with death on their own - they need guidance.
6-9 years:
Common reactions of primary school children dealing with death include blaming themselves, looking for the person who has died, feeling their presence, withdrawing, feeling anxious or distressed, feeling embarrassed or different, lack of eating or sleeping, toileting problems, etc.
Primary school children have reported feeling better about death after:
Frequent reassurance that they are safe
Keeping routines and normal activities going
Being told that it is okay to be sad - using words to describe feelings
Being allowed to ask questions and have answers provided honestly
Comfort items being provided
Encouraged to play and being allowed to process what has happened
10-12 years:
Common reactions of older children dealing with death include being especially anxious of safety of family and friends, try very hard to please adults and not to worry them (not letting themselves grieve), feeling strong emotions such as anger and guilt, wanting to take on more adult responsibilities, etc.
Older children have reported feeling better about death after:
Having time to talk to loved ones about what has happened
Regular reassurance, including physical, such as a hug
Feeling understood and having time to grieve
Regular encouragement
Avoiding expectations of adult behavior
Fran
https://www.kidshealth.org.nz/bereavement-reactions-age-group
Discovery (cont.)
Teens (13-18) years:
Common reactions of teenagers dealing with death include being easily distracted or forge ...
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1. Supporting children
under five years old when
someone important has died
INFORMATION FOR PARENTS, CARERS AND
PRE‑SCHOOL WORKERS
Grief support for
children and young people
in Oxfordshire
2. Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died 1
SeeSaw is a small, independent Oxfordshire charity
founded in 2000 to provide grief support for local
children, young people and their families, or those
who care for them. We provide advice, information,
resources, consultation, training and support for
schools and, when appropriate, face‑to‑face support
sessions for children and young people, usually
in their own homes. We offer telephone advice
and resources to enable family members and
professionals to provide the support. Often we help
them to find the right words, or to understand that a
child’s reaction is very normal for their age, or how to
think about the situation from a child’s point of view.
SeeSaw offers advice and support to parents/
carers and nursery/school staff on how to talk to
young children about death and dying and what is
a ‘normal’ reaction for their stage of development.
Generally, children under five haven’t yet reached the
stage of development where they understand what
death means and the impact the death of someone
important will have on their life. Because of this we
don’t usually offer direct 1:1 work with children of this
age, but will always be happy to have a conversation
with parents and carers if they have specific
concerns about their child.
Who this booklet is for
The death of someone significant in a young child’s life can
interrupt the natural attachments that are so important at this
stage in the child’s development. This, together with the absence
of strong memories of their own, can be difficult as the child
grows and in later life.
This booklet is for parents, carers and professionals supporting
a young child after a death in the family. It will help them to help
the child to develop an understanding of what has happened,
build resilience and promote long‑lasting connections to the
person who has died.
3. Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died2 3
Young children, death
and grief
It isn’t many years ago that people doubted that
children grieve, and especially children under
five years old. Today children’s reactions to
death are much more recognised and instead
we ask ourselves how children grieve and what
kind of support do they need.
When a parent or main carer has died young
children will inevitably react to the absence of
the person as well as to a change in familiar
routines and sometimes surroundings. The
security that they once felt is fragmented and
they must learn to negotiate and accept their
new environment. Even a very young baby
with no vocabulary or understanding of death
will express distress from such a loss. The
way death is understood will vary enormously
between tiny babies and children who are ready
to start school. Nevertheless, although children
under five generally do not fully understand
what it means when someone has died, they
will pick up the mood of the adults around them
and respond by acting out their feelings, often in
behaviour rather than words.
Many young children show through comments
they make and questions they ask that their
understanding of the word ‘dead’ is limited.
• “Mummy’s died, she’s gone to heaven, and
she’s coming back!” (Two year old)
• “Is daddy coming back in a minute?”
(Three year old)
Often their questions reflect the matter of fact
way in which they receive the information:
• “Are we going to get a new mummy now?”
(Four year old)
Other children have only heard of death taking
place in a violent way from things they’ve seen
on the television or in online games and may be
heard to say: “Who shot him?” (Five year old)
These and other stories emphasise that
whatever the circumstances, babies and
children under five years old need to be
given simple explanations about what has
happened and then plenty of reassurance and
understanding.
Understanding how young
children grieve
The early years of a child’s life are focused
on home and family. These formative years
are centred on building attachments, in the
first instance, to parents or carers. This helps
children to feel confident to explore their
immediate world and then the world beyond the
home. When this pattern is interrupted through
the death of a parent or carer it will have a huge
impact on the child. Without fully understanding
why, the baby, toddler or young child may well
respond to this change in the following ways.
Babies 0–12 months
• Babies react to the sense of loss of the
person who cares for them.
• They react to smell and the way they are
handled.
• They will notice if once smiling faces at feed
times become sad faces.
• They may become more unsettled, affecting
sleeping and eating patterns.
• They may become more tearful and clingy.
Ways to help:
• keep to as familiar and regular a routine as
possible
• avoid passing the baby round to different
people, especially at key times like feeding,
bathing and bedtime
• babies rely on their senses for comfort and
security so use familiar smells, sounds, tastes
etc. Wrapping a baby in an article of clothing
belonging to the person who has died might
bring comfort through its warmth and smell
Toddlers 1–3 years
• Toddlers will notice the absence of the
person who has died without understanding
what has happened.
• They may repeatedly ask when the person is
coming back as they will not understand the
finality of death.
• They will pick up the emotions of the adults
around them.
• They may express their emotions through
changes in behaviour rather than language.
• They may become more anxious and clingy,
especially with strangers or at bedtime.
• They may become more aggressive in play
or have more temper tantrums.
• They may show some regressive behaviours;
behaving as when they were younger when
their world felt a safer place.
• They may ask the same questions over and
over again.
Ways to help:
• give lots of reassurance, cuddles and
understanding
• give simple explanations to questions,
repeating what has been said before
• stick to familiar routines and boundaries
• find time to play and relax together
4. Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died4 5
Young children 3–5 years
• Young children may struggle to understand
the meaning of death, especially its finality,
while at the same time using the correct
language, giving the impression they
understand what has happened.
• They may show signs of missing the person
but may hop in and out of their sadness.
• They may ask the same questions repeatedly.
• They may be clingy with a remaining
carer and not want to engage with less
familiar people.
• They may act out in their play what has
happened, especially if the death was the
result of a car accident or illness, perhaps by
playing doctors and nurses.
• They may show some regressive
behaviours, behaving as they did when
they were younger.
• They may have outbursts of emotions
expressed as anger, shouting or tantrums.
• They may show signs of increased anxiety
and worries.
• They may think they were the cause of the
person dying – through something they said
or did or by being told off before the death.
Ways to help:
• give lots of reassurance, cuddles and
understanding
• give clear simple explanations about what
happened and be prepared to repeat the
information. Encourage family and friends to
use the same explanation
• talk about the person who has died, sharing
photographs and stories
• try to be available, rather than sending the
child to be with other relatives or friends,
even if you feel unavailable to the child
because of your own grief. They could offer
support by being with the child in your home
where they are still able to see you
• maintain familiar routines and boundaries
• involve the child in rituals to say goodbye to
the person who died, including any funeral
• find time to play and relax together
Explaining to young children
that someone has died
When breaking news to children that someone
important has died you might want to begin by
saying, “I have something very sad to tell you…”
Although you may want to put off telling a child
such a difficult piece of information it’s better to
tell them as soon as possible. This will avoid the
child, however young, hearing about it through
conversations with other people or one‑sided
telephone conversations. It’s better if you can
tell the child yourself but you may find it helpful
to have a friend or member of the family with
you for support.
• Find a quiet and comfortable place to break
the news, somewhere where you will not
be disturbed.
• Allow unhurried time for the child to respond
and ask any questions.
• Simply tell the child that the person has died.
This may be enough at first.
• Follow the child’s lead for more information –
if they ask a question they are probably ready
for the answer, so again simply reply to the
question. Avoid giving too much information
or detail.
• Be prepared to follow this up later with
further simple explanations or repetition of
the information you have already given.
Talking to young children
about death
Talking to very young children about death and
dying is difficult when your natural instinct might
be to protect them from such information.
Adults often try to soften the information by
using words and phrases like ‘lost’, ‘gone to
sleep’, ‘gone’, ‘passed’, ‘become a star’, all of
which add to the young child’s confusion.
• “If Nanny is ‘lost’ why don’t we go and look
for her?”
• “If Daddy has gone to sleep why don’t we
wake him up?” Worse still, the child may
refuse to go to bed or let other adults go
to sleep.
• “If Mummy has ‘gone’ where has she gone?
Why can’t she come back?” This may lead
to searching activities, watching out of the
window, jumping up if someone knocks on
the door expecting it to be the return of the
person who died.
Children under five understand their world
in concrete terms. They will take what they
are told very literally. If they are told the dead
person is in heaven (a place like any other
place they might visit) they may then ask
where heaven is, and if they can go and visit
the person there. If they are told the person
is in the sky they may assume that if they go
on an aeroplane they will be able to see the
person who has died. If they are told “Daddy has
become a star” they will literally believe that is
what has happened. It would certainly be less
confusing to say something like, “When we look
at the stars (even the brightest star) we can
remember Daddy and talk about him.”
Euphemisms like these are not helpful to young
children and can be very confusing. Instead
give clear, honest explanations using simple
language and in small pieces like a simple
jigsaw puzzle.
5. Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died6 7
Supporting young children in
the early days after a death
The early days after a death can be a time
of disbelief about what has happened, deep
sadness, shock and insecurity. Young children
will watch and be affected by how the adults
around them are reacting. Parents may have
less energy for their children and there may
be times when they are impatient with them,
which can be very confusing for little ones.
Seeing parents cry can also be upsetting for
young children who may in turn respond very
lovingly towards the parent, trying to cuddle and
wipe away any tears. Some parents try to hide
their emotions in order to protect their child,
but children are often best served by simple
explanations from the parent that they are
upset because they are sad that [……] has died.
This gives the child permission to show their
emotion and talk about what has happened. It
will also reassure the child that they are not the
cause of the sadness.
In these early days young children can be
helped by:
• lots of reassurance, giving an immediate
sense of being taken care of
• lots of cuddles to provide security
• avoiding unnecessary separation from their
parent/carer, however unavailable you may
feel to your child because of your own grief.
Separation may increase the child’s anxiety
about something bad happening to you or
someone else
• making space to check out that the child has
understood what you have told them and to
answer any further questions
• letting the child express what has happened
through play and drawing
• creating a simple story appropriate to the
child’s age. This will help with the repetition of
questions toddlers and young children may
ask and how they tell other people what
has happened:
• “Do you remember I told you that sadly
Mummy had an accident in her car and
her body was very badly hurt and she died.
That means we can’t see Mummy any
more, but we will always be able to talk
about her.”
• “Do you remember that Daddy had an
illness called cancer. The doctors tried to
make him better but sadly he died and
we can’t see him anymore. We will always
remember Daddy.”
Explaining to young children
what dead means
We often use the word ‘dead’ with young
children in relation to dead insects, animals or
flowers so it’s a word that they are often familiar
with. By looking at the natural world the child
will learn to see the difference between things
that are dead and alive.
Book choice: ‘Lifetimes’ by Bryan
Mellonie and Robert Ingpen
A picture book for little children that
explores the beginnings, endings and
lifetimes in between of animals, insects
and people young and old.
When talking about a person who has died
it might be important to give a bit more
information about what dead means.
The following phrases might help:
· when someone dies their body stops working
· they don’t feel anything any more like pain,
heat or cold
· they don’t need to eat or drink anything
· their body is a bit like an empty shell
· all that made the person so very special, like
their smile, the little things they did and said,
are what we remember, and these things will
stay with us forever
You may also need to explain to the child that
when someone dies it means that we won’t
be able to see them any more, but that we will
always remember them. This can often lead to
further conversations about where the person is
now and what will happen next.
A book called ‘What happens when
someone dies’ is available free from
SeeSaw. This book is to help adults
explain to children in simple language and
pictures what happens after someone
dies. It explores questions about what
happens to the body, visiting the chapel of
rest, and what a coffin is, as well as how
to explain to children about the funeral. In
simple words it also helps to explain what
happens to the body in a cremation or
a burial.
6. Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died8 9
Explaining to young children
about the funeral
Parents and carers often wonder whether or
not to take their child to the funeral, and friends
and relatives can offer different advice about
whether or not it’s appropriate. This can make
the decision more difficult. There is no right or
wrong answer to this: it will depend on knowing
your child, your family beliefs and your own grief.
Even very young children can be prepared for
what will happen at a funeral. If pre‑school
children are given enough information and
allowed to choose, they will often say they want
to attend. It is an opportunity for them to say
goodbye to the person who has died and is part
of the next stage of coming to terms with what
has happened. At the time it may have little
significance to the child, but as they get older
they may appreciate that they were included.
Ways of preparing young
children to attend the funeral:
· Talk about what will happen at the funeral
and explain that it’s the time for saying
goodbye to the person who has died.
· Involve the child in the preparations for the
funeral, perhaps by choosing a song or the
colour of the flowers. Children may like to
draw a picture to put in or on the coffin.
· Take the child to see where the funeral will
take place, or show them a picture.
· Explain that at the funeral some people may
be crying because they are very sad, and
that some people may also tell funny stories
about the person who died, so they may
laugh as well.
· Explain to the child what will happen during
the day and who might be there.
· Take a bag of quiet toys, books or colouring
that the child can play with during the funeral.
· Arrange for someone the child knows well
to take them out if they get upset. This will
help you if you are overwhelmed by your
own grief.
· If you decide not to take the child to the
funeral think about other ways for them to
say goodbye. This may be visiting a favourite
shared place, the grave or memorial. Lighting
a candle together or blowing bubbles are
other options.
Family life beyond the funeral
After a funeral there is still a lot for parents
and carers to attend to in the midst of their
own grief. How adults manage their grief will
affect the way children manage theirs, though
it’s important to remember that a young child’s
grief will be different. It’s easy to assume that
children are experiencing the same level of
pain and sadness as their parent/carer, but
unlike adults children will dip in and out of
their grief – one moment being very sad and
the next asking what’s for dinner or to watch
television. Although it’s difficult to see a young
child struggling with sad feelings there is no
magic wand to make it feel better. Reassurance,
understanding, talking and time are key to the
grief journey for young children.
What young children need at
this time:
• Physical closeness. Young children need
physical contact to feel safe and secure –
gentle rocking, stroking, carrying or cuddling.
• Respond to children’s ongoing questions. It
is by repeating questions that young children
will gradually understand what has happened.
• Provide times of fun. Grief can be exhausting.
Young children need to know that it is ok to
have fun and to play and do normal activities.
Having fun doesn’t mean that they have
forgotten the person who died.
• Talk about feelings. Help young children
to express difficult feelings in safe ways
by talking about how they are feeling. Talk
about different feelings using pictures or
storybooks.
• Build memories. Remembering can be
healing so offer opportunities to talk about
the person who died. Look at photographs
together, tell funny stories, and remember
special times as well as the difficult ones.
Young children may have few memories of
the person who died so building a bigger
picture of them will be important – things
they did when they were little, where they
lived, favourite hobbies, foods etc.
· Believe in the child’s ability to recover and
grow. Your hope and faith in their ability to
recover may be needed when theirs fails.
• Taking care of yourself. How parents and
carers model this will be crucial. This is
why at SeeSaw we encourage adults to
take care of themselves in order to look
after their children. Just as on an aeroplane
the instruction in the safety briefing is to
put on your own air pressure safety mask
before fitting your child’s, so it is following a
bereavement. This might be by seeking your
own support through grief counselling with a
charity such as Cruse Bereavement Care
(www.oxfordcruse.co.uk).
Book choice: ‘I miss you’ by Pat Thomas
A first look at death for young children.
7. Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died10 11
Activities for young children
Remembering
Remembering and talking about the person who
has died is an important part of grief and the
healing process. Helping your child put together
a special memory box will help keep memories
alive. The child may not have many memories
of their own but by adding photographs and
small items that belonged to the person who
has died you can help the child build up a bigger
picture of them. The memory box can be added
to as the child grows and asks more questions.
Create a memory box
You will need a box with a lid (it could be a shoe
box that your child can cover and decorate).
Together gather objects that tell a story about
the person who has died and put them in
the box.
Here are some ideas of what you might include:
· a scarf or a special brooch or other piece
of jewellery
· a special tie or hat
· perfume, soap or aftershave
· photographs of special days out
· favourite music or film
· a toy animal if you liked to go to the zoo or a
drawing of the park
· pictures or objects about things they liked
doing, e.g. a packet of seeds if they liked
gardening or pictures of any hobbies, like a
favourite football team, fishing or baking
· pictures your child might have drawn for
the person
· cards that have been sent or received for
birthdays, Christmas, holiday postcards or
sympathy cards
· the order of service from the funeral
The box can include anything that reminds the
child of the person who has died. Help your child
to be as creative as they can.
Book choice: ‘Always and forever’
by Alun Durant and Debi Gliori
A picture book for young children that
tells the story of a group of animal friends
and their sadness when their friend fox
dies. The story explores the sad feelings
after death but also how months later
they begin to remember all that fox used
to do. They realise they will never forget
fox but that he will always be in their heart
and minds.
Thinking about feelings
While you may think it’s better to hide your
emotions from a young child, they will learn
about their own emotions through talking about
how you are feeling: “I’m feeling sad because I’m
missing Daddy.”
Using simple feeling words like sad, cross and
worried will help them to build a vocabulary
of their own to say how they too are feeling.
Children can learn that it is ok to express their
feelings and that the feelings won’t last forever.
Toys, books, drawing and play will all help
children learn about and express their feelings.
Exploring feelings
Pre‑school children love stickers so find
sheets of stickers with emotion faces on them
– they are a great way to start conversations
about feelings.
Alternatively, with paper and pens draw feelings
faces or emojis together:
Make worry dolls from clothes pegs
You will need:
• coloured pre‑school craft pegs or plain pegs
that you can paint
• coloured wool or thread
• scissors and glue
• marker pens
Wrap the coloured wool or thread around peg
about a third of the way down. Fix the wool in
place with a small dot of glue. Draw a face on
each doll to show a different feeling.
8. Supporting children under five years old when someone important has died12
Book choice: ‘Silly Billy’ by Anthony
Browne
A lovely illustrated story about young
Billy who is a bit of a worrier, especially
at bedtime. While staying with his granny
she tells him about worry dolls and how
they can help.
Individual photobooks
Little children love looking at photobooks
as they are a good way of talking and
remembering together. To protect precious
photographs make young children their own
wipe‑clean photo book.
You will need:
• small zip food bags
• coloured card
• photographs
• glue or double‑sided tape
Cut card to fit snugly inside the food bags. Stick
a photograph to each side of the card.
Repeat until you have about four or five bags.
Seal bags and glue, sew or tape the zip edge
together to create a book.
Caution: check all plastic is sealed and tape safely
in place
We have a list of helpful books that can
encourage children to explore what they
are experiencing. The booklist offers a
range of topics for children of different
ages and is available from SeeSaw (see
back cover for contact details) or on our
website: www.seesaw.org.uk
Photos: Christine LeHeup, shutterstock.com, istockphoto.com
9. Grief support for
children and young people
in Oxfordshire
Seesaw works closely with children and their families
to help them learn to live in a world where someone
they love has died.
We provide:
• telephone consultation with any parent
or professional who is concerned about
a bereaved child
• visits to families to assess their needs
and discuss how SeeSaw might be able
to help
• specially trained support workers
who can meet with the child or young
person at home to help them explore
the impact the bereavement is having
on their lives and find ways of coping
• specialist support for families and
professionals when a parent or sibling
is dying
• group activities that enable children
and young people and families to meet
together in a fun and relaxed way
• information and training for school
staff who are supporting a bereaved
child in the classroom or managing a
death in the school community
• training, consultancy and resources for
professionals who work with bereaved
children and young people
SeeSaw
Bush House
2 Merewood Avenue
Oxford OX3 8EF
Enquiries and advice line:
01865 744768
Email: info@seesaw.org.uk
www.seesaw.org.uk
Registered charity no 1076321
Registered company no 3790965
Published October 2019