Narrative Therapy in Practice: A “storied” approach to building mental health resiliency in adolescents

1999 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 147-162 ◽  
Author(s):  
Miguel R. Fernandez

This paper investigates the use of Narrative Therapy in a high school. The focus is on demonstrating the use of Narrative Therapy in working with students who demonstrate at-risk behaviours especially with a view to building resiliency. It is proposed that to fully understand the value of Narrative Therapy, theory supporting this approach should be discussed. Underlying this approach is the recognition that a better understanding of theory will extend the practice of Narrative Therapy. To that end this paper approaches the use of Narrative Therapy on two levels, (a) a description of the theory that supports the practice of Narrative Therapy. This description focuses on the language and practices associated with Narrative Therapy. Specifically, issues around stories are discussed at length, and (b) a case study is presented attempting to bind theory to practice. It takes the reader on a journey by a student who was at-risk to her developing resilient behaviour. Initially, several key words and phrases are introduced as direct representations of the theory of Narrative Therapy. As the case study unfolds additional descriptions of theory impacting on practice are presented. The final outcome is a comprehensive description of a counselling approach that has relevancy in dealing with the complex issues of mental health resiliency in schools.

Author(s):  
Amir Raz ◽  
Sheida Rabipour

“From Theory to Practice: Contextualizing Brain Training” provides the backdrop to the field of brain training. From the pressures of competitive society to diagnostic labeling and the allure of commercialization, a number of chronological progressions shaped and facilitated the emergence of modern brain training practices today. This chapter delivers a brief historical background describing the challenges and conflicts surrounding brain research and medical practice, and uses mental health as a case study.


2001 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
pp. 131-140
Author(s):  
Miguel Fernandez

This paper begins with a brief description of research stating that adolescents in schools generally pursue reputations that are either nonconforming or conforming. This is usually achieved through the development of goals specific to each type of reputation. Essential to the maintenance of a reputation is the recruitment of an audience. It is also proposed by researchers that intervention by school personnel becomes crucial when trying to counteract the negative effects of a nonconforming Using a case study, this paper investigates the use of Narrative Therapy with a 15-year-old male student in a high school who had developed a nonconforming reputation. A three-year-old nonconforming reputation is put through a Narrative framework that challenges “its” goals and reason for being. As the sessions progress, there is a sense that this young person is beginning to move towards a more preferred sense of self that is potentially different from the one set-up by the nonconforming reputation. This is achieved by using a Narrative style dialogical approach that shows how language censures and as well as its ability to promote (liberate) chosen behaviour. Apart from the development of a more preferred sense of self, an interesting outcome from using this approach has also been the unique way restraint works within the school.


2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 52-60
Author(s):  
Diana W. Schofield ◽  
Cheryl S. Al-Mateen ◽  
Lyons T. Hardy ◽  
Zheya Jenny Yu ◽  
Andres Pumariega

1994 ◽  
Vol 22 (4) ◽  
pp. 337-340
Author(s):  
Jacqueline M. Atkinson ◽  
Denise A. Coia

This paper describes the problems of a dyadic relationship, that of co-authors, and the behaviours that contribute to breakdown. From this a checklist of behaviours is drawn up, to be used to investigate the “at risk” behaviours of potential co-authors.*


Mindfulness ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 219-227 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Milligan ◽  
Alexandra Irwin ◽  
Michelle Wolfe-Miscio ◽  
Lisa Hamilton ◽  
Linda Mintz ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 128-140
Author(s):  
Mojtaba Mahdavi ◽  
Ahmad Behpajooh ◽  
Saeed Hasanzadeh ◽  
Seyed Saeed Sajadi Anari ◽  
◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Alexis Harris

<p>At-Risk Units (ARUs), which contain and prevent suicide and self-harm among prisoners, have been criticised for their isolating, non-therapeutic nature. This thesis explores the potential for care-oriented practice to develop in ARUs at two prisons, with a particular emphasis on the role that multi-disciplinary teams and an enhanced healthcare presence can play in achieving this goal. Adopting a qualitative framework, this research draws upon nineteen interviews with nursing, forensic and custodial ARU staff from Hawkes Bay Regional Prison (HBRP) and Rimutaka Prison (RP). This research found that while normative care-oriented operational safeguards and legal frameworks underpin current ARU policies, they can often become shaped, or in some cases inhibited, by managerial adherence to compliance, risk-management priorities, limited resourcing, staffing issues and a punitive prison culture. However, in instances where multi-disciplinary teams are well resourced, have open channels of communication and operate within health-focused ARU environments, as evidenced in the current workings of RP, positive care-oriented responses to ‘at-risk’ prisoners can be better provided. The thesis concludes by noting that incremental reforms to the current framework may be useful in enhancing care-oriented ARU practice. However, even with change, the question remains whether correctional ARUs can stem burgeoning mental health issues and ‘at-risk’ behaviours among prisoners.</p>


2011 ◽  
Vol 26 (S2) ◽  
pp. 1968-1968
Author(s):  
M. Kaess ◽  
F. Resch ◽  
R. Brunner ◽  

ObjectivesTo develop a school-based screening for adolescent risk behaviour and psychopathology and to investigate the predictive value of different adolescent risk behaviours in terms of suffering from psychopathology that requires mental health care.MethodsA two-stage professional screening was developed and constituted in the randomized-controlled prevention trial “Saving and Empowering Young Lives in Europe (SEYLE). A school-based screening consisting of a self-report screening questionnaire and a semi-structured professional interview in case of being identified as at-risk were performed in a representative sample of almost 2,000 adolescents within the SEYLE sample of about 8,000 students from 7 European countries and Israel.ResultsA very high percentage of students were detected to be at-risk by either showing risk behaviour or psychopathology or both in the first stage of the screening. From these students, only about one third came to the study center and took part in the interview. About half of of the interviewed students reached were referred to mental health care.ConclusionsRisk behaviours are very common among European adolescents and may also have increased during the last years. Nevertheless, most risk behaviours are weak predictors for suffering from psychopathology that requires mental health care compared to psychopathology or suicidal behaviour theirselves. Although they are certainly unhealthy and badly influencing adolescent development risk behaviours seem to be an ubiquitous phenomenon during adolescence and cannot simply be regarded as signs for severe psychopathology.


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