Teen Violence Therapists in Milton, ON

Sharise Sealy-McCallum

Sharise Sealy-McCallum

Registered Social Worker (RSW)

Virtual

I am a Registered Social Worker with over 10 years of experience providing compassionate, virtual therapy for youth and adults across Ontario. Specializing in CBT, Narrative Therapy, and School Navigation Counselling, I provide a safe, trauma-informed space to help you navigate anxiety, stress, and life transitions, moving toward the clarity and peace you deserve.

How do therapists in Milton, ON compare?

Number of therapists listed

1

Currently accepting new clients

100 %

Therapists in Milton, ON who prioritize treating:

100% Anxiety
100% Racial Identity
100% School Issues
100% Suicidal Ideation
100% Teen Violence
100% Pregnancy, Prenatal, Postpartum

How therapists see their clients

100% Online Only

Top therapy approaches used in Milton, ON:

100% Cognitive Behavioural (CBT)
100% Narrative
100% Motivational Interviewing
100% Person-Centered
100% Positive Psychology
100% Strength-Based
100% Trauma Focused

Frequently Asked Questions About Teen Violence

What is teen violence and how does therapy help?

Teen violence refers to intentional physical, emotional, or sexual harm directed by or against adolescents — including peer violence, bullying, gang involvement, dating violence, community violence, and family violence. Therapy helps by addressing the root causes of violent behaviour, the trauma responses in those who have experienced violence, and the broader contexts — family, school, community — that shape adolescent aggression and victimization. Both young people who are violent and those who have experienced violence benefit from appropriate therapeutic support.

What causes teen violence?

Teen violence is never caused by a single factor — it results from interactions among individual (temperament, impulsivity, trauma history, substance use), family (inconsistent or harsh parenting, family violence, parental mental health), school (peer relationships, bullying, academic failure), community (neighborhood violence, gang activity, poverty), and societal (media, cultural norms around violence and masculinity) factors. Effective interventions address multiple levels — not just the individual teen — and understand violent behaviour as communication of unmet needs and unresolved pain.

What therapy approaches are most effective for adolescent aggression and violence?

Multisystemic Therapy (MST) has among the strongest evidence for juvenile offending and serious delinquency — it intervenes across family, peer, school, and community systems simultaneously. Functional Family Therapy (FFT) and Multidimensional Treatment Foster Care (MTFC) also have strong evidence. Individual approaches include CBT for anger and aggression, motivational interviewing, and trauma-focused treatment for those whose violence is rooted in unresolved trauma. No single approach is effective for all teens — matching treatment to the individual's circumstances is essential.

What about teens who have been victims of violence?

Many adolescents experience both victimization and perpetration of violence — these roles often overlap rather than being distinct. Teens exposed to community violence, bullying, or family violence are at elevated risk for trauma responses (PTSD, depression, anxiety) and may act out violently themselves as a result. Trauma-focused therapies (TF-CBT, EMDR, somatic approaches) are appropriate for teens who have been victimized. Safety planning and support for ongoing safety concerns are also important components of treatment.

How do parents and families fit into teen violence treatment?

Family involvement is central to the most effective adolescent violence interventions. Parents are not simply passive observers — they are key change agents. Effective treatment supports parents in developing consistent discipline, strong emotional connections with their teen, and improved monitoring and communication. Family sessions address the dynamics within the family that contribute to the teen's behaviour. When parents are themselves experiencing mental health challenges, substance use, or domestic conflict, addressing these is part of the treatment approach.