
Dr. Janice Cohn is a
psychotherapist who has specialized, for the past
twenty-five years, in helping adults and children cope with
grief, loss and life transitions. For the last decade she
has specialized, as well, in children’s character education,
especially with regard to fostering compassion and moral
courage in what has become an increasingly violent world.
Dr. Cohn holds a doctorate in clinical social work and has
written and lectured widely on these and related topics,
providing consultation to schools and a variety of
professional and community organizations. Her weekly column
for the Family Times Section of The Washington Times,
which focused on raising compassionate children, ran for
over two years and reached approximately half a million
people. She is a former Presidential Faculty Appointee to
the Columbia University Continuing Education Seminar on
Death and Dying, and former chairperson of the
Multidisciplinary Bereavement Committee of Newark Beth
Israel Medical Center.
Dr. Cohn
has served as a special consultant to the Family Division of
the New Jersey Superior Court in Ocean County, New Jersey,
focusing on the emotional needs of children and parents
during the process of separation and divorce. She has also
developed, for the courts, a special parent education
program and accompanying video for divorcing parents. In
conjunction with this project, she has written an
educational handbook, Surviving
the Pain of Divorce: Eight Steps for Parents and Children,
which has been distributed throughout the state via the
family court system.
Dr.
Cohn’s book, I had a Friend
Named Peter: Talking With Children About the Death of a
Friend (William Morrow, 1987) has been cited for
excellence by a number of educational organizations and has
received critical praise from publications such as The
New York Times Book Review and The School Library
Journal. Her second book,
Why Did It Happen? Helping Children Cope With the Existence
of Violence (Morrow, 1994) was chosen as a selection
of the Book-of-the-Month Club and has been praised by The
School Library Journal and Publisher’s Weekly,
among other publications. A third book,
Molly’s Rosebush (Albert
Whitman, 1994), which deals with a young child’s reaction to
her mother’s miscarriage, was equally well received.
The Christmas Menorahs: How A
Town Fought Hate (Albert Whitman, 1995) has received
and/or been nominated for more than a dozen national
awards. It has also been adapted into a play, which is
currently touring nationally. Dr. Cohn’s book,
Raising Compassionate,
Courageous Children In A Violent World (Longstreet
Press, 1996) has been widely used by schools and parent and
religious organizations. Dr. Cohn’s most recent work is
Paper Candles: How
Courage and Goodness Triumphed in an American Town,
a play for upper elementary and middle school children, or
for high school students to perform for the lower grades.
Dr. Cohn
maintains psychotherapy practices in New York and New
Jersey. |