Working in music with adolescents who experience disability

Author(s):  
Daphne Rickson

Working in music with adolescents who experience disability to support their health and wellbeing involves creating opportunities for their emotional expression and successful interaction with others. Music is a resource that can highlight their capabilities, yet they might need the support of a music therapist to maximize the positive affordances that music can provide. In this chapter, two contrasting examples of music therapy work, with adolescents who have attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and those who have intellectual disability, are offered to demonstrate how young people have engaged with music therapy group processes and in turn developed positive relationships and self-identities. Music making can be a motivating and enjoyable activity for adolescents with disabilities, and a powerful resource to support their personal growth, autonomy, and sense of wellbeing.

1989 ◽  
Vol 3 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janet Cowan

Often through the course of work with a patient, issues arise which challenge one's role as a music therapist, and which lead one to question the limits of the experiences being offered to the patient. In this paper I describe my work with a woman who initially avoided and resisted shared music-making, and who gradually became more able to be involved in spontaneous activity. I tried to find ways of understanding the issues at the root of our relationship, in order to build on the musical interactions. From this case, I intend to illustrate the deeper questions which, I believe, are pertinent to be asked more generally about the limitations attending the role of the music therapist.


2002 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Esther Murow

Music therapy in Mexico is only beginning. Though there is a lot of interest in what it is and on its effect on health and personal growth, there are also a lot of misconceptions about what it really is. I have encountered that one of the obstacles for the growth of music therapy in Mexico is what I call the myths about what it is. I am sure some of them are well known to my colleagues around the world: if you play a music tape the client gets well, or just get some percussion instruments and have the children play and you are doing music therapy. I think one of the worst misconceptions here is that some people believe there is no need for professional training and education to practice music therapy. Being a music therapist has been a real struggle not to mention trying to educate health and education professionals about music therapy, and that it is a real profession in other Countries! On the other hand, there are many musicians and health professionals who are very interested in music therapy and its use.


2012 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Becky White

This paper explores how studying clinical work can be a rich experience and lead to personal and musical development. In this paper I describe completing a master’s project on group work for children who have autism. This paper describes how analysing a group in detail (using music and video coding analysis) and reading  literature on music therapy and group work, led to a personal prompting to reflect on my own musical experiences and identity and to develop more as a musician. It explores how the roles of music therapist, student and musician can influence each other an be blurred together, and how I experienced cross-over in my personal and musical life.  


2002 ◽  
Vol 16 (2) ◽  
pp. 100-100

The following article was published in the last edition, erroneously attributed to Katrina Skewes as sole author. It was co-authored by Katrina Skewes and Tony Wigram. A Review of Current Practice in Group Music Therapy Improvisations Katrina Skewes and Tony Wigram Abstract The information contained in this article has been derived from a series of interviews conducted by the authors with selected specialists in music therapy group improvisation. Although the music therapy literature barely addresses the musical material created in group improvisations, it is not true to say that there is no expertise in this area. Rather, it is likely that the difficulties in communicating these musical processes via the written word or transcribed score has discouraged researchers and clinicians from publishing current theories and understandings. For this reason, selected specialists were approached to take part in in-depth interviews aimed to solicit their current understandings of music therapy group improvisations. The results in this article are made up solely of the information shared in these interviews in response to a series of open-ended questions posed by the authors. Introduction and Brief Literature Review Music therapy group improvisations are a powerful tool for working with groups of clients who do not communicate successfully using verbal means. Additionally, this technique has grown in popularity for those interested in using creative experiential modalities for gaining insight into self and their relationships with others, as well as for the teaching of music therapy students. Interestingly, there is little documentation regarding the faci Iitation of this music therapy technique, although it is addressed within Bruscia's text Improvisational Models of Music Therapy (1987) and the Nordoff-Robbins literature (Aigen 1997; Ansdell 1995; Pavlicevic 1995a; Nordoff & Robbins 1977). As far as the authors are aware, empirical research into the musical material generated in music therapy group improvisations is yet to be conducted. More recently, the literature has included discussion of the relationship between music therapy group improvisation and group analytic theory, proposing that the music therapist's role is similar to a conductor and that the musical material often develops in a fugal fashion (Towse 1997). Amason (1997) has explored the experience of group improvisation for a number of music therapy clinicians who met for the purposes of ongoing professional development. Drawing on the principles of phenomenological music analysis (Ferrara 1984, 1991) and Langenberg's (1995) resonator function, Amason has created a useful model for reflecting on the musical material generated, suggesting that musical analysis of improvisations changes clinical work from a purely ‘doing’ level of practice to a reflexive level of practice. A number of models have also been proposed for exploring music therapy improvisation work with individual clients (Ansdell 1991; Langenberg, Frommer & Tress 1993; Lee 1992, 2000; Pavlicevic 1994, 1995b), however the literature on group improvisation is sparse and based primarily on theorising and borrowing results from related research. Katrina Skewes is an Australian music therapist who recently completed her PhD examining the experience of group music therapy for bereaved adolescents. She works at the University of Melbourne, at the Melbourne Royal Children's Hospital and at Very Special Kids, a children's hospice. Tony Wigram is Professor and Head of PhD Studies at the University of Aalborg, Denmark, and Head III Music Therapist at Harper House Children's Service, Radlett, England. Skewes, K. & Wigram, T (2002) ‘A Review of Current Practice in Group Music Therapy Improvisations' British Journal of Music Therapy 16(1): 46–55


Author(s):  
Helen Oosthuizen

The South Africa-based ‘Support Programme for Abuse Reactive Children’ combines psycho-educational and cognitive behavioural diversion approaches with creative programmes, including music therapy, to offer holistic rehabilitation to young sex offenders. This chapter offers a case story describing key moments in the music therapy process for one group of young offenders. From my perspective as the music therapist, I consider how collaborative drumming enabled participants to experience belonging and acceptance and how musical story-writing and improvisation motivated group members to support and challenge one another as they took ownership of their personal stories. I further explore how the experience of creating and performing a group rap offered a means through which group members could reconnect with their home communities as adolescents with potential, hope for the future, and a willingness to take responsibility to make relevant changes in their lives.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (SP1) ◽  
pp. e6-e13
Author(s):  
Nathan Wilson ◽  
Andy Smidt ◽  
Matilda Tehan

Intellectual disability is characterized by a combination of limitations in intellectual functioning and adaptive behaviour originating during the developmental period, before the age of 18.1 Intellectual functioning refers to an individual’s capacity to learn, problem solve and reason; adaptive behaviour refers to the conceptual (e.g., language, money, time), social (e.g., interpersonal skills, social responsibility, ability to follow rules), and practical (e.g., personal care, travel, use of telephone) skills. Developmental disability is a term used to describe lifelong physical and/or cognitive disabilities and includes, but is not limited to, intellectual disability, cerebral palsy, autism, Down syndrome, Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD; in the USA) and fetal alcohol syndrome.2 As intellectual and developmental disabilities often co-occur, most health, educational and social professionals work with people who have both.    


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rosemyriam Cunha

The purpose of this qualitative study was to describe and discuss the affective, cognitive, and physical events that occur when people gather to make music. Using a theoretical framework derived from community music therapy and sociology of music, this work focuses on the experiences and perceptions of five women who participated in music therapy group work. Structured observation was used to register the participants’ affective, cognitive, and physical manifestations during the group work. Results suggested that music therapy collective music making stimulated participants to interact and develop different forms of feeling, thinking, and acting. Making music together encouraged participants to think about their feelings, roles, and judgments, reflecting that the collective experience promoted positive changes in their lives.


2018 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Ingeborg Nebelung ◽  
Karette Stensæth

Music therapy has for a long time been associated with humanistic values, both among music therapists but more and more also among people outside the field. Do we all have a common understanding of what humanistic music therapy is? The point of departure in this paper is the development of a new Norwegian residential care unit for adolescents in child welfare services. Those responsible for this unit have included a music therapist, because they want to base the enterprise and its activities upon the values they associate with music therapy. This paper asks: What is “humanistic music therapy” and how might its perspectives correlate with the visions and ideas of the leaders of a child welfare institution? A literature review will assess the critical understanding of the concept of humanistic music therapy, in order to understand its unbiased and foundational values. Semi-structured interviews with the unit’s initiators will describe their visions and hopes for the development of the care unit with regard to humanistic music therapy. By correlating the findings from the literature review and the interviews, the paper describes aspects that might contribute to a common ground of understanding for the music therapist and the workers in the unit, which in turn might contribute to personal growth and health promotion among the adolescents and their community.


1994 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-6 ◽  
Author(s):  
Janice M. Dvorkin

It is the focus of this paper to look at the idea of resistance as providing information on the primary object experience. Using this information, the music therapist needs to assess his or her role in playing music during the session, in the same way that he or she assesses verbal interventions.


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