1 / 16

Reframing: Exploring Impact of Ideology on Self-Esteem among Deaf and Hard of Hearing Consumers

Reframing: Exploring Impact of Ideology on Self-Esteem among Deaf and Hard of Hearing Consumers. Alison Aubrecht, M.A., DCC, LPCC & Justin Small, M.S. Deaf and Hard of Hearing Services Division Mental Health Program. Agenda. Program information Introduction to the idea of Reframing

dustinm
Download Presentation

Reframing: Exploring Impact of Ideology on Self-Esteem among Deaf and Hard of Hearing Consumers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reframing: Exploring Impact of Ideology on Self-Esteem among Deaf and Hard of Hearing Consumers Alison Aubrecht, M.A., DCC, LPCC & Justin Small, M.S. Deaf and Hard of Hearing Services Division Mental Health Program

  2. Agenda • Program information • Introduction to the idea of Reframing • Discussion: Theoretical Foundations • Examples of Reframing • Questions/Discussion

  3. DHHSD Mental Health Program • History • 4 Specialists, Program Director, MH Interpreter • Locations • Services offered • Population Served

  4. Activity • Don’t think of a. . . • Lemon

  5. A word about Ideology • Ideology is the picture or concept that we have accepted in conjugation with a word. • Lemon: yellow fruit. Sour. • McDonalds Commercial • Our understanding of words drives our attitudes, biases, and ways we behave. • Ideology also has the power to influence our dialogues. • Reframing is, in essence, about ideological shifts.

  6. What is Reframing Definition http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/magazine/articles/2008/04/13/you_wont_like_this_article/

  7. Theoretical Foundations • Major Players in the area of Cognitive Reframing Aaron Beck • Cognitive Therapy Albert Ellis • Rational Emotive Behavioral Therapy (REBT)

  8. Key Concepts of Cognitive Reframing • Problem is with one’s thinking • Distorted • Maladaptive • Teach ourselves to believe, therefore we feel bad • Objective: • Change our thinking to conform to reality • Assumption: • We can be taught to think differently • If we think differently, we will feel better

  9. Types of Reframing • Context Reframing Is the ability to take a negative situation and make it positive in another context. • Content Reframing This is the ability to change what a situation means to you. http://www2p.istockphoto.com/file_thumbview_approve/14356390/2/istockphoto_14356390-very-messy-room.jpg http://blog.bioethics.net/2008/11/where-it-rains-theres-autism/

  10. Disability • What images does this word evoke? • How would you describe “Disability” • Ultimately, what ideology is associated with “disability” and where does this come from?

  11. Disability- Impact on Self-Esteem • Emotional Impact • Helplessness • Low Self-Efficacy • Withdrawing and resentment • Irrational v. Rational thinking • Can Do • Can’t Do • Ways we reinforce that thinking • Action • Inaction • Language

  12. Reframing: An Example • Paul Jacobs sample http://agbell.org/NetCommunity/Page.aspx?pid=657 • Aubrecht’s Response http://www.clercscar.com/?tag=alison-l-aubrecht

  13. Reframing Activity • New list for Disability: If an ideological shift occurred, what would our “images” of disability be? • What are some ways we can reinforce this new ideology? Think: • Individually • Socially • Environmentally • Consider the “R-Word” campaign

  14. List of Tools • Use humor– this is the essential tool • Try out different words to see how they feel • Challenge yourself • Don’t get stuck in someone else’s ideological frame. For example, when asked a question, carefully examine the frame from which the question is being asked. • Instead of immediately accepting a message or belief, try to learn more about the root/influence.

  15. Questions?

  16. Resources • http://www.rebt.ws/ • http://www.beckinstitute.org • http://www.personal.kent.edu/~dfresco/CBT_Readings/Cognitive_Work.pdf

More Related