cognitive-behavioral intervention and motivational interviewing presented by donna tebought –...
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Cognitive-Behavioral Intervention and
Motivational Interviewing
Presented byPresented by
Donna Tebought – Program Director 1Donna Tebought – Program Director 1
Risk Reduction Services/Cognitive Behavioral UnitRisk Reduction Services/Cognitive Behavioral Unit
October 11, 2012October 11, 20121
But in the real world it will never work
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Why should we place offenders into programs?
Altered attitudes, values, and beliefs through direct challenging and/or new behavioral practice
Risk Control vs. Risk ReductionLearning through Self-DiscoveryCognitive Dissonance
Cognitive Behavioral Programs
Responsibility to change is with the offender not us.
We don’t take credit for their failures nor their successes.
Motivation for change has to come from within. The offender is the one who makes the argument for change, not us.
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Cognitive Behavioral Programs
Moral Reconation Therapy (MRT)
Thinking for a Change (T4C)
D.E.T.O.U.R.
Anger Management
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Cognitive Behavioral ProgramsIntervention
ALL staff should be using cognitive behavioral (Cog) practices
A good cog “intervention” and a good cog “program” are not the same thing…Why?
A good Cog intervention can be “drowned” by staff who are not “on board”. How?
What are the skills all staff can be using?
10/11/2012 & 10/25/2012 6
Reinforcement TechniquesSupport your facilitatorSupport the participantsDon’t talk bad about the programsSit in on a classAttend graduationsMotivational Interviewing
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Definitions oMotivation
oMotivational Interviewing?
(Council for Philosophical Studies, 1981: Miller 1985b)
Why MI, or What’s In It For Me?
Improve communication skills, be more efficient & effective:Less talking by youMore talking by the offender
Improve outcomes:Increased compliance, reduced recidivismImproved commitment to changeIncreased participation in interventions
Decrease your stress:They act, you apply consequences (positive and negative)Don’t fix, assist… then hold them accountable!If they don’t change, you don’t argue, just follow through!
Benefits of Motivational Interviewing
–Provides a model for the process of change
–Reframes “denial” as “ambivalence”
–Shows staff how to manage ambivalence
–Identifies offender motivational structure
–Correlates with better compliance
–Improves re-entry planning and offender
involvement
–Affirms the offender
–Increases rapport with the offender
–Helps offender make progress towards change
–Gives offender ownership and responsibility of their change process
Donna Tebought Program Director 1, Cognitive Behavioral Unit-RRS
C/O Clayton TC270 Falcon Drive
Forest Park, GA 30297Office: (404) 675 – 6810Pager: (404) 382 – 3898
Fax: (404) 362 - 6599E-mail: [email protected]