🧠 How to Support Your Child’s Therapy: A Parent’s Guide to Building a Strong Partnership

Therapy can be a transformative experience for children—but it’s most effective when parents are informed, involved, and supportive. Here’s how you can actively participate in your child’s therapeutic journey while respecting their privacy and building trust with their therapist.


1. Establish Open Communication with the Therapist

  • Request a parent intake session (if not already offered) to share your concerns and understand the goals of therapy.
  • Ask for regular check-ins (monthly or biweekly) to stay informed about general themes and progress—without breaching your child’s confidentiality.

Open communication builds trust and ensures you’re aligned with the therapist’s approach.


2. Respect Your Child’s Privacy

Therapy is a safe space for your child to explore their thoughts and feelings. Unless there’s a safety concern, therapists won’t share session details.

Instead of asking, “What did you talk about?”, try:

“How did you feel after therapy today?”

This keeps the door open without pressure.


3. Understand the Treatment Goals

Ask the therapist to explain:

  • The treatment plan
  • Types of interventions used (e.g., CBT, play therapy, trauma-informed care)

Then, learn how to reinforce those strategies at home, such as:

  • Supporting emotion regulation
  • Practicing coping skills
  • Using consistent communication tools

4. Be a Partner in the Process

If family dynamics or parenting strategies are part of the issue:

  • Be open to family sessions or parent coaching
  • Follow through at home by modeling recommended behaviors (e.g., managing your own stress)

Your consistency at home can significantly boost your child’s progress.


5. Share Relevant Updates

Keep the therapist informed about:

  • Major life changes (e.g., divorce, moving, loss)
  • Behavioral shifts at home or school (e.g., sleep issues, peer conflict)

A quick email or note before the session can be helpful—especially if your child may not bring it up themselves.


6. Coordinate with Other Professionals (If Needed)

If your child is also seeing:

  • A psychiatrist
  • A school counselor
  • An occupational or speech therapist

…ask the psychologist to help coordinate care. You’ll need to sign a release of information form to allow communication between providers.


7. Ask Questions—Stay Curious, Not Controlling

Helpful questions to ask your child’s therapist include:

  • “How can I support the goals of therapy at home?”
  • “Are there behaviors I should watch for that might signal progress or concern?”
  • “What’s developmentally appropriate for my child in this situation?”

Curiosity builds collaboration. Control can create resistance.


Are You Looking for a Psychologist for Your Child?

If you’re in California, Michigan, or Alaska and seeking compassionate, evidence-based care for your child, I offer psychological services tailored to your family’s needs.

👉 Schedule a complimentary 15-minute consultation by calling or texting me at 760-235-1364.