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Co-parent Coaching
Children require 2 parents working together on their behalf. Regardless of their parents ability, level of trust or confidence in one another. Parents need help to establish their new working relationiship as co-parent partners after separation or divorce. We sit in the same room at the same time with both parents for 3 hour work sessions. Each parent comes with their own set of agenda items and we problem-solve within a psychoeducational and child development framework. We work to creat a newly established relationship between the parents, void of the emotions from their past relatationship and focus on effectively co-parenting their children moving forward.
Professional Education Workshop
Jed and Susan present lectures to a wide variety of professionals: Judges, Magistrates, Attornies, Mediators, Guardians ad Litem, Mental Health Professionals and Educators regarding best practices for professionals working with clients experiencing separation, divorce and post-divorce.
Collaborative Divorce Proessional
Collaborative divorce is a method with which to get separated or divorced that is completely separate from the adversarial process. When utiliizing this method, clients retain only collaboraitvely triained divorce attornies and also work with a number of other collaborative neutrals to reach an amicable resolution to their divorce proceeding. Susan works as a communication specialist and child specialist in this process.
For more information click here to visit International Academy of Collaborative Professionals website.
Guardian ad Litem
This is a court appointed position wherein the guardian invistigates the dynamics of the family system, and makes reccomendations based on the best interest of the child factors to attempt to resolve the undecidecd issues in separations, divorce, post-divorce or parental rights matters. Billed hourly at $125 per hour against a $3000 retainer.
Parent Coordination
This position is appointed by the court after the court has ruled that allows for the parent coodinator to remain involved with the family for up to two years after the judgement. This rule is designed to assist parents in resolving their own conflict with the assistance of a quasi-judicial officer.
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