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Promoting Youth Empowerment, Youth Voice, and Leadership through Training

Promoting Youth Empowerment, Youth Voice, and Leadership through Training. Presentation to the National Federation of Families for Children’s Mental Health, November 16, 2013, Washington, DC. Our Team. Eileen Brennan Pathways RTC, Portland State University Martin Rafferty Youth MOVE Oregon

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Promoting Youth Empowerment, Youth Voice, and Leadership through Training

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  1. Promoting Youth Empowerment, Youth Voice, and Leadership through Training Presentation to the National Federation of Families for Children’s Mental Health, November 16, 2013, Washington, DC.

  2. Our Team Eileen Brennan Pathways RTC, Portland State University Martin Rafferty Youth MOVE Oregon Claudia Sellmaier & Pauline Jivanjee Pathways RTC, Portland State University

  3. Workshop Objectives Participants will learn to: Apply positive youth development and empowerment principles in their work with young people. Develop practical strategies to increase youth participation in decision making. Strengthen youth self-determination, leadership, and voice. Access online training modules to work more effectively with emerging adults and their families.

  4. Youth M.O.V.E. Oregon • Strengthen youth self-determination; • Build youth leadership; • Make the voice of youth heard

  5. Preparing to Work with Emerging Adults • Young people 14-30 years of age who have mental health conditions have much less favorable life outcomes than peers. • Adult service models not attractive to young people who frequently dropped out of services. • Pathways staff joined with young people, family members, and service providers to develop a model to shape interventions to make them: • Developmentally appropriate • Attractive to young people • Effective in achieving recovery-oriented outcomes.

  6. Pathways Model • Based on theories of positive development: • promote thriving by providing people with opportunities to guide their own lives toward goals they find personally meaningful. • motivate them to promote their own positive development as they • build skills and knowledge, • expand their capabilities, and • gain competence in their chosen roles in family, community, and society.

  7. Insert pathways model here

  8. Outcomes of PD approaches • Increasing positive developmental (PD) outcomes • skills and knowledge for adult roles; • skills and strategies for managing challenges that are specific to the individual young person; • increasing their ability to meet basic needs; and • getting and maintaining positive and supportive connections.

  9. Driver of your own life • Key task --to learn how to be the “driver” in your own life. • capacity to find out what is intrinsically motivating for oneself, the • capacity to be proactive, • the capacity to engage with supportive life contexts • capacity to manage and learn from uncertainty, setbacks, and shifts in perspective.

  10. Develop positive identity Develop the stable values and commitments that characterize mature adult positive identity, or sense of self. Drive your own development in directions that increasingly reflect and reinforce these values and commitments

  11. What service providers can do Use a structured process that allows young people to practice driving their own development. Teach and model—and the young person learns and practices—the use of key skills, tools, and procedures/processes that are helpful in taking steps toward positive developmental outcomes.

  12. Principles of practice • Conveygenuine respect for the young person and appreciation as a unique individual; • Be driven by the perspectives and priorities of the young person; and • Take a “motivational” approach. • Emphasize strengths and competence, • connections to positive contexts, • selectively promote PD outcomes.

  13. Youth M.O.V.E. Oregon

  14. Youth M.O.V.E. Centers • Partnered with local systems and service • Ran with peer support • Peer support based recovery & leadership groups

  15. Treaty of Algeron One simple way to skyrocket traditional mental health services for young adults. Stigma Informed Services

  16. Search Institute’s 40 Assets Youth M.O.V.E. Oregon’s work with The 40 Developmental Assets. • As a heritage and ground setting document • As a youth choice and guided process • As a Peer Support delivered service. • As a best practice outcome measure of services.

  17. Invested in aftercare • Capturing data after services. • Incentive based • Stigma Informed • Results affect services

  18. Example of the Engagement Process See Handouts.

  19. Pathways Transition Training Collaborative The Pathways Transition Training Collaborative (PTTC) is a national advisory committee of young people with mental health service experience, family members, and service providers and researchers from human service professions. In consultation with PTTC, we are developing a research-based online training program using core competencies and a tested core curriculum.

  20. Approach Promoting Positive Pathways to Adulthood training program developed in four phases: specification of core competencies, core curriculum design and evaluation, webinar content development and evaluation, and online module development and testing.

  21. Online Training Development Eight one-hour modules focus on different topics being developed from tested core content. Platform is Adobe® Captivate®, designed for asynchronous and free delivery through narrated slides and video clips of young people, service providers, and family members discussing core content. Each focuses on one or two core competencies, emphasizing knowledge, attitudes and skills

  22. Note. Competencies based on Jivanjee, Brennan, & Sellmaier (2012).

  23. Online Training Evaluation • Interactive by design, each module features: • internal knowledge check questions, and • a multiple choice assessment at its conclusion. • We are pilot testing module one now with groups of direct service providers who complete: • Transition Provider Competency Scale (TPCS; Jivanjee et al., 2011)at baseline and completion, • qualitative post-training evaluation instrument, • the concluding assessment.

  24. Example http://www.pathwaysrtc.pdx.edu/modules/PTTC-module1-excerpt/PTTC-module1-excerpt.htm

  25. Q & A Q & A

  26. Thank you! Portland Oregon, Home of Pathways RTC Eileen Brennan, Co-Principal Investigator: brennane@pdx.edu Pauline Jivanjee, Co-Principal Investigator: jivanjee@pdx.edu Claudia Sellmaier, Graduate Research Assistant: csellmaier@pdx.edu Slides are available at our project website: www.pathwaysrtc.pdx.edu/proj-trainingcollaborative.shtm 29

  27. References Arnett, J. J. (2003). Conceptions of the transition to adulthood among emerging adults in American ethnic groups. New Directions for Child and Adolescent Development, 100, 63–75. Bandura, A. (2006). Guide for constructing self-efficacy scales. In F. Pajares & T. Urdan (Eds.), Self- efficacy beliefs of adolescents (pp. 307-337). Greenwich, CT: Information Age Publishing. Bennett-Levy, J., Hawkins, R., Perry, H., Cromarty, P., & Mills, J. (2012). Online cognitive behavioural therapy training for therapists: Outcomes, acceptability, and impact of support. Australian Psychologist, 47, 174-182. Brennan, E., Jivanjee, P., Roser, E. (2010). Core competencies for transition service providers. Portland, OR: Portland State University, Pathways Transition Training Collaborative, Research and Training Center for Pathways to Positive Futures. Clark, H. B., & Unruh, D. K. (2009). Understanding and addressing the needs of transition-aged youth and young adults and their families. In H. B. Clark & D. K. Unruh (Eds.), Transition of youth and young adults with emotional or behavioral difficulties: An evidence-supported handbook(pp. 3-22). Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes. Delaney, R., Nelson, C., Pacifici, C., White, L., & Keefer Smalley, B. (2012). Web-enhanced preservice training for prospective resource parents: A randomized trial of effectiveness and user satisfaction. Journal of Social Service Research, 38, 503-514. Hoge, M.A., Tondora, J., & Marrelli, A.F. (2005). The Fundamentals of workforce competency: Implications for behavioral health. Administration and Policy in Mental Health 32(5/6), 509- 531. doi: 10.1007/s10488-005-3263-1

  28. References Jivanjee, P., Brennan, E. M., Roser, E., Conley, J., & Spiegel, C. (2011, March). Navigating the transition to adulthood: Self assessment of service provider competencies. Poster presented at the 24th Annual Children’s Mental Health Policy and Research Conference. Tampa, FL. Jivanjee, P., Brennan, E., & Sellmaier, C. (2012). Tips on core competencies for transition service providers. Portland, OR: Portland State University, Pathways Transition Training Collaborative, Research and Training Center for Pathways to Positive Futures. Jivanjee, P., Kruzich, J., & Gordon, L. J. (2007). Community integration of transition-aged individuals: Views of young adults with mental health disorders. The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research, 35, 402-418. Swan, K. (2005). Learning effectiveness: what the research tells us. In J. Bourne & J. C. Moore (Eds.), Elements of quality online education, practice and direction (pp. 13-45). Needham, MA: Sloan Center for Online Education, 13-45. Vander Stoep, A., Davis, M., & Collins, D. (2000). Transition: A time of development and institutional clashes. In H. B. Clark & M. Davis (Eds.). Transition to adulthood: A resource for assisting young people with emotional or behavioral difficulties, (pp. 3-28). Baltimore: Paul H. Brookes. Wade, J. & Dixon, J. (2006). Making a home, finding a job: investigating early housing and employment outcomes for young people leaving care. Child and Family Social Work, 11, 199–208. Walker, J., Gowen, K., Jivanjee, P., Moser, C., Sellmaier, C., Koroloff, N., & Brennan, E. M. (2013). Pathways to Positive Futures: State-of-the-science conference proceedings. Portland, OR: Portland State University, Research and Training Center for Pathways to Positive Futures. Wolf-Branigin, M., Schuyler, V. , & White, P. (2007). Improving quality of life and career attitudes of youth with disabilities. Research on Social Work Practice, 17(3), 324-333.

  29. Acknowledgments Thank you to all the members of the Pathways Transition Training Collaborative for their advice and input, and to Nicole Aue and GoutamSaha for their technical support. We are grateful for assistance from Martin Rafferty of Youth MOVE Oregon.

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