The Group-level Interventions learning pathway focuses on strategies and perspectives for interacting with and intervening with kids when they are in a group of their peers. This requires understanding Care and Treatment goals that tend to pertain to all, or most, of the kids on a residential unit or in a classroom. It includes techniques and tools appropriate for informal interactions to facilitating various activities to running House Meetings geared toward a variety of congregate living issues.
Episode 59: Season 3 – Overview & Intentions
This Season will contain two learning pathways. One series will focus on working with kids in varying size groups. Group work ranges from simple interactions in a living room or classroom to managing various activity groups to running group meetings focused on various aspects of team-building and congregate living. Another series will focus on physiological centering by presenting a program for listeners to gain a basic level of competence at mindfulness / relaxation / meditation; in preparation to teach these techniques to kids. This episode will also touch upon one of the foundations for forming therapeutic relationships – explaining your intentions. It ends with a brief pitch about the importance of kids having fun and of you having fun with the kids.
Episode 60: Care vs. Treatment, Behavior Management, & Respect
Episode 60 continues along the Group-Level Interventions Pathway. Building on the last episode, other foundational perspectives for going beyond only providing quality Care to providing transformational Treatment are presented.
show moreThese include making a distinction between Care and Treatment, and understanding that behavior management techniques, while often times essential, are part of Care and not Treatment. Several organizational traps of becoming too focused on behavior management are explored, including the key distinction between interventions that inspire mindless compliance and interventions that inspire thoughtful cooperation. The importance of respect for a transformational treatment experience is also highlighted.
show lessEpisode 61: House Meeting1 – Resilience & Skills Development
Episode 61 of the Becoming Centered podcast starts an episode arc focused on the use of House Meetings in residential treatment programs. House Meetings are a structured meeting of all the residents and available staff that are part of a residential unit at a treatment program.
show moreHouse Meetings are the single most powerful structure for building a positive unit culture that supports the formation of a resilient residential team of staff and clients. This episode arc starts out by presenting a vision for how House Meetings can contribute to team-building efforts and especially to the kids developing a sense of belonging, a sense of purpose, a sense of agency, and a sense of meaning to their residential experience. At the same time House Meetings also provide an effective forum for encouraging the development of social skills and executive skills in the kids.
This episode also addresses the first step in developing House Meetings to meet their full potential; creating a shared vision among all the staff involved in the residential unit. This requires aligning the development of House Meetings with the mission and vision of the residential treatment agency, creating a shared understanding of the purposes and goals of House Meetings, empowering direct-care staff to take an active role in developing House Meetings, and helping people find meaning in putting work and effort into the design and implementation of these meetings.
show lessEpisode 62: House Meeting2 – Phases of Team Development
Episode 62 of the Becoming Centered podcast is the second episode in an arc focused on House Meetings. In my experience, House Meetings are the single most effective group structure in the residential week for promoting team-building and for developing the kids into a high-performance team.
show moreWhen that happens the entire residential experience shifts from having to spend an excessive amount of time on behavior management to a treatment environment that promotes mental health.
Developing that kind of positive peer and staff culture takes time. It also takes solid strategy and understanding of team development. This episode blends together the basics for resilience (a sense of belonging, purpose, agency, and meaning) with a well-known model for understanding the phases of team development – forming, storming, norming, and performing.
This episode also presents a way to understand four major ways in which our brain’s regulate our emotions, thoughts, and behaviors. With time-tested structures like check-in’s, House Meetings become a time for practicing executive skills, learning emotional sensitivity, acquiring prosocial beliefs, and healthy values.
At the same time, House Meetings can become an effective way to teach listening respectfully, stating opinions appropriately, giving and receiving feedback maturely, and learning how to negotiate and compromise with others.
show lessEpisode 63: House Meeting3 – Check-ins
Episode 63 of the Becoming Centered Podcast focuses on how to facilitate Check-ins as part of a residential treatment program’s House Meetings.
show moreCheck-ins are an excellent way to start House Meetings. Literally, people take turns giving a brief report on how they are doing that day.
Structured effectively, the practice of conducting Check-ins can become a foundational technique for a program providing a treatment experience for the kids. When used in a group setting, Check-ins are steered by the facilitator to focus not so much on the kid doing the check-in, but on how everyone else on the team can support that kid in having a good day and a good week. In this way the check-in structure supports the development of a high-performing team and supports the kids improving at emotional sensitivity. Emotional Sensitivity is taking other people’s feelings and moods into account for how you interact with them. Improved Emotional Sensitivity helps kids be successful in any shared living setting, and with all the important relationships in their lives.
show lessEpisode 64: House Meeting4 – Emotional Sensitivity
Running a residential unit for children and youth that goes beyond providing quality Care to also delivering an impactful Treatment experience requires staff to constantly focus on team-building.
show moreIt’s as a high-performing team that the kids develop their own self-regulation and resiliency; through helping their team-mates manage their daily emotional, cognitive, and behavioral challenges. One of the best structures in which to develop a residential unit into a team is the, at least weekly, House Meeting.
House Meetings have several parts, such as announcements, group problem-solving, feedback, celebrations, and team-building exercises; however, the heart of House Meetings, at least in my mind, is the structured check-in. This episode focuses on using check-ins to encourage kids’ skills at emotional sensitivity which then leads to consideration and cooperation. Unlike empathy, emotional sensitivity doesn’t require feeling what someone else is feeling. Instead, it refers to consciously perceiving another person’s feelings and moods, potentially simply because they have told you how they’re doing. Emotional Sensitivity is then taking that knowledge and modifying your interactions out of consideration for the other person’s state of being. It’s being a good housemate, a good friend, and a good team-mate for experiencing residential treatment.
show lessEpisode 65: House Meeting5 – Storming and Purpose
Skillful facilitation of House Meetings is one of the most challenging, but also most impactful, aspects of providing a treatment experience.
show moreDeveloping a group of troubled kids into a high-performing team, that absorbs each other’s misbehaviors and promotes maturation, is a difficult task. Storming behaviors are common among kids in residential treatment. In House Meetings, a significant number of kids will deeply struggle with inappropriate meeting behaviors – ranging from aggressively menacing the whole room to simply not paying attention or actively distracting others.
However, storming behaviors, that sabotage team-building efforts, can be leveraged by staff to actually speed up the team-building process. One of the best ways to do that is to focus not on the misbehaviors, but on the impact of those misbehaviors on team-building. That is greatly enhanced by repeatedly explaining to the kids the purposes of forming a strong team, the purposes of House Meetings, and really the purpose of their entire residential treatment experience.
show lessEpisode 66: House Meeting6 – Parts & Treatment Objectives
Episode 66 of the Becoming Centered Podcast presents four major parts to a residential treatment program’s House Meetings (a regularly scheduled meeting of staff and clients).
show moreEach part, (1) check-ins, (2) announcements, (3) group discussions / agenda items, and (4) wrap-up provides a forum for promoting resilience, self-regulation, social skills, and team-building.
Regardless of the specific content of any single meeting, staff focus on four aspects of resilience, four aspects of self-regulation, and four aspects of “meeting behaviors” or social skills.
Resilience is promoted through encouraging the kids to experience, due to their participation in House Meeting, a sense of belonging, purpose, agency, and meaning.
Improved self-regulation is promoted through encouraging emotional sensitivity, through presenting evidence to support positive beliefs, through discussing values, and through giving the kids opportunities to practice their executive skills.
The “meeting skills” of respectful listening, stating opinions appropriately, giving and receiving feedback, and negotiating and compromising are taught and encouraged through every part of the House Meeting.
By using House Meetings to provide treatment aimed at improved resilience, self-regulation, and social skills the residential counseling staff will guide the kids through the forming, storming, and norming phases of team development to turn them into a high-performing team that provides each client with a transformative residential treatment experience.
show lessEpisode 67: Performative vs. Systemic Change
Becoming Centered Podcast 67, “Performative vs Systemic Change” lays the groundwork for understanding how to design effective behavior-focused program structures that are intended to shape the behaviors of children and youth in residential treatment programs.
show moreThe key to effective design of these structures is understanding when and how to focus on performative behaviors versus when and how to focus on inner systemic change. “Performative behavioral change” are changes in the kids’ surface behaviors while they are at the treatment program. “Inner systemic change” are changes in how the kids manage their feelings, use staff feedback, put effort into their own personal development, and manage their relationships with others. Systemic change will lead to changes in surface behaviors that are much more likely to last after kids leave a residential program.
Both types of change have their place in a residential treatment program. Depending on the design, both types of change can be encouraged through behavior-focused structures including things like point systems, point and level systems, coupon systems, token economies, and behavior contracts. These techniques are, often times, the structural foundation of a lot of residential programs. This podcast will give you the tools to understand how to better design and use these techniques.
show lessEpisode 68: Behavior-Management vs. Feedback-Incentive Systems
Episode 68 of the Becoming Centered Podcast expands on the topic of how to design interventions targeted at changing performative surface behaviors versus interventions designed to inspire inner systemic changes in how kids manage their emotions, adopt self-regulating beliefs and values, and consciously manage relationships with others.
show moreThe key design difference is whether or not a point system, coupon system, token economy, or other forms of behavior contracts track observable behaviors or try to track the kids’ efforts at self-directed change.
This episode examines the profound differences between behavior-management systems and feedback-incentive systems. On the surface these two structures look similar to one another, both involving kids getting some type of score based on staff observations and then rewarding them for attaining some goal number. However, when designed and implemented properly these interventions are fundamentally different.
Behavior-Management interventions track observable behaviors in an attempt to condition improved behaviors. Feedback-Incentive interventions get kids invested in implementing feedback and then making more pro-social choices. One is targeted at specific behaviors. The other is a cognitive intervention designed to engage kids in making real effort to manage their own development. Understanding this difference is key to designing these essential tools for effective residential treatment of children and youth.
show lessEpisode 69: Expectation Systems & Contracts
Episode 69 of the Becoming Centered Podcast, building off of the previous two episodes, presents listeners with a powerful tool for residential treatment programs – Expectation Contracts.
show moreEpisode 67 presented the underlying conceptual difference between using point systems, behavior contracts, and other “behavioral” change techniques to impact performative surface behaviors versus impacting inner systemic change. Both have their place.
Episode 68 expanded on these distinctions by introducing the idea of a “behavior-management” system versus a “feedback-incentive” system. Both use the same elements of tracking some behavior or other aspect of performance, giving it a score (or coupon or other token), the accumulation of which results in a pay-out. However, feedback-incentive systems are a fundamentally different intervention aimed at cognitive change in how kids manage themselves, their beliefs, their values, and their relationships with others. The focus is not on discrete behaviors but on increasing the efforts kids make to develop themselves.
This episode takes that understanding and explores concrete ways to take the feedback-incentive model and turn it into a focused Expectation Contract. A structure is presented to empower listeners to create customized Expectation Contracts for their residential units or for individual clients.
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