For children who are at high-risk for trauma, instability, mental health problems, and delinquency, family involvement is especially important. But there is another type of parental involvement – over-parenting or “helicopter” parenting, as it is sometimes known – that can be detrimental to children and can complicate the counseling process.1) watch TED Talk by Julie Lythcott-Haims.2) review article; Ungar, M. (2009). Overprotective Parenting: Helping Parents Provide Children the Right Amount of Risk and Responsibility. The American Journal of Family Therapy, 37, 258-271. address the following questions:How might an over-involved parent complicate the counseling process for children and teens?What strategies would you use to help parents understand their overparenting behaviors and the effects they have on the child?How might you work with a parent who wanted to be very involved in their teenager’s counseling sessions, against the wishes of the teen himself?The Ungar article discusses the idea that overprotection is not necessary in environments that are generally very safe. How would you approach a family counseling situation in which the child faces very real threats to safety such as community violence, gang involvement, or high rates of involvement with drugs?