波音游戏-波音娱乐城赌球打不开

 

Reactive Aggressor Group Intervention (Secondary School)

Introduction

In this section, the details of the reactive aggressor group intervention are presented with real examples and videos. For better understanding, the progress of the group intervention will be divided into six stages over ten sessions: preparation, first meeting, initial stage, early mid-stage, late mid-stage and late stage.

Sessions Plan

Session Application of CBT Program Objective
1 Establish trust and rapport. Reactive aggressors are always suspicious and very sensitive to their surroundings. They also lack self-confidence and have low self-esteem. It is therefore important to establish a positive relationship with reactive aggressors to help them feel secure in the group, reduce their vigilance towards workers and other group members, and increase their sense of belonging within the group.
2 Identify group members’ automatic thoughts and their emotional and behavioural responses. Reactive aggressors tend to interact with others with hostile attributional biases. They easily become angry, anxious and uncomfortable around their peers and often argue with others. Workers should understand how reactive-aggressor members encode, interpret and respond to events, because this will help workers to make accurate overall evaluation about group members’ irrational beliefs.
3 Educate group members about Ellis’ A-B-C concept. Use common and emotionally neutral campus situations to facilitate discussion. Workers should help group members to understand that different people will react differently to similar events because they hold different beliefs, thus the outcomes of similar events may vary widely.
4 Detect group members’ irrational beliefs. Use interpersonal conflicts that are often encountered by reactive aggressors as scenarios for discussion to detect group members’ irrational beliefs.
5 Discriminate group members’ irrational beliefs. Cognitive distortions often occur in the automatic thoughts of reactive aggressors. These ‘mind traps’ can cause negative behaviours and emotions. The intervention aims to help group members recognise these ‘mind traps’, and thus understand and manage their irrational beliefs.
6 - 7 Debate group members’ irrational beliefs. Because reactive aggressors have rigid beliefs, they exhibit one-dimensional thinking and seldom see things from others’ perspectives. Therefore, workers should help group members to debate their irrational beliefs by using multi-angled thinking, and help them understand that different people have different beliefs and opinions. Group members are thus encouraged to take others’ beliefs into account, to help them establish their own rational beliefs in the subsequent activities.
8 Formulate a new and effective rational belief with a new set of emotional and behavioural responses. Through debate, group members learn to express their emotions, strengthen their ability to consider things from different perspectives, open their minds and speculate about different possibilities. They will then be assisted to establish rational beliefs and a new set of emotional and behavioural responses.
9 Behavioural assignment: Social skills and self-expression training. Reactive aggressors can easily experience interpersonal misunderstanding when interacting with others because they lack appropriate social skills and always feel misunderstood and alienated. This inability to relate to others generates more social problems, thus perpetuating the vicious circle of misunderstanding. Therefore, through ‘I-message’ behaviour-training, group members are encouraged to express their personal feelings and expectations, to reduce misunderstandings and conflicts with others.
10 Termination and relapse prevention. Review and praise group members on the positive behavioural and mental changes they have made, to consolidate their successful experiences and minimise the probability of relapse.

Case Study

Preparation for group intervention

Case description(excerpted from Project C.A.R.E., Volume 5, 55 - 57)

First meeting of group intervention

Case description(excerpted from Project C.A.R.E., Volume 5, 58 - 59)

Initial stage of group intervention

Case description(excerpted from Project C.A.R.E., Volume 5, 60 - 65)

Early-mid stage of group intervention

Case description(excerpted from Project C.A.R.E., Volume 5, 66 - 69)

Mid-late stage of group intervention

Case description(excerpted from Project C.A.R.E., Volume 5, 70 - 72)

Late stage of group intervention

Case description(excerpted from Project C.A.R.E., Volume 5, 73 - 76)

Back to Top

© 2019 City University of Hong Kong          Project on Children and Adolescents at Risk Education (Project C.A.R.E.)
大发888 dafa888游戏| 百家乐官网什么叫缆| 金公主百家乐官网现金网| 在线百家乐代理| 明升88备用| 网络百家乐官网必胜投注方法| 金冠娱乐城最新网址| 百家乐变牌桌| 博狗百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 淘金百家乐官网现金网| 百家乐游戏什么时间容易出对| 查找百家乐官网群| 去澳门百家乐官网娱乐城| 黄金岛棋牌游戏下载| 百家乐赌场软件| 百家乐现金网平台排名| 澳门百家乐官网打法精华| 沙龙百家乐官网娱乐场开户注册 | 沙龙百家乐官网娱乐场| 百家乐筹码14克粘土| 嘉禾百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则 | 大发888怎么玩不了| 澳门百家乐要注意啥| 大发888下载英皇国际| 百家乐官网赌场牌路分析| 四会市| 全讯网.com| 百家乐官网缆法排行榜| 大发888送58体验金| 百家乐中的小路怎样| 百家乐的路单怎样看| 网上百家乐有假的吗| 百家乐官网最新的投注方法| 澳门百家乐官网指数| 美高梅百家乐官网娱乐城| 六合彩挂牌| 棋牌易发| 大发888官方 3000| 大发888娱乐城下载地址| 大发扑克娱乐场| 纳雍县|