158 research outputs found
Questions About the Construct of Empathy in the Treatment of Adolescents in the Juvenile Justice System
TEACHING APPROACHES AND FACULTY DEVELOPMENT IN BUSINESS EDUCATION: A SYSTEMATIC NARRATIVE REVIEW
This systematic narrative review explores how teaching and learning approaches (T&LAs), educational technologies (ETs), and faculty development initiatives (FDIs) may impact business students' learning and employability. Based on 62 studies, results highlight that experiential learning methods are the most effective ones. However, limited data on ETs and FDIs and methodological heterogeneity prevented a meta-analysis. Future studies are needed to strengthen the evidence found
The Perversion of Youth
Over the past two decades, concern about adolescent sex offenders has grown at an astonishing pace, garnering heated coverage in the media and providing fodder for television shows like Law & Order. Americans’ reaction to such stories has prompted the unquestioned application to adolescents of harsh legal and clinical intervention strategies designed for serious adult offenders, with little attention being paid to the psychological maturity of the offender. Many strategies being used today to deal with juvenile sex offenders—and even to define what criteria to use in defining "juvenile sex offender"—do not have empirical support and, Frank C. DiCataldo cautions, may be doing more harm to children and society than good. The Perversion of Youth critiques the current system and its methods for treating and categorizing juveniles, and calls for a major reevaluation of how these cases should be managed in the future. Through an analysis of the history of the problem and an empirical review of the literature, including specific cases and their outcomes, DiCataldo demonstrates that current practices are based more on our collective fears and moral passions than on any supportive science or sound policy
Training needs of counseling trainees in corrections: A survey of clinical directors
As the mental health treatment needs of adults and adolescents within the criminal justice system has garnered increasing attention, the training of mental health professionals has increasingly focused on serving individuals in forensic and correctional settings. We surveyed 55 clinical directors of mental health programs in forensic and correctional settings in a New England state. Respondents reported that Clinical Mental Health Counselors (CMHCs) broadly participated in assessment, treatment and supervision within these programs. Counseling experience emerged as the most important knowledge/experience domain for prospective job applicants and CMHCs were rated as providing a large share of the treatment within these settings. Implication for the education and training of CMHC students are reviewed and discussed
Training needs of counseling trainees in corrections: A survey of clinical directors
As the mental health treatment needs of adults and adolescents within the criminal justice system has garnered increasing attention, the training of mental health professionals has increasingly focused on serving individuals in forensic and correctional settings. We surveyed 55 clinical directors of mental health programs in forensic and correctional settings in a New England state. Respondents reported that Clinical Mental Health Counselors (CMHCs) broadly participated in assessment, treatment and supervision within these programs. Counseling experience emerged as the most important knowledge/experience domain for prospective job applicants and CMHCs were rated as providing a large share of the treatment within these settings. Implication for the education and training of CMHC students are reviewed and discussed
Fostering Broad Oral Language Skills in Preschoolers from Low SES Background
Socioeconomic disparities increase the probability that children will enter school behind their more advantaged peers. Early intervention on language skills may enhance language and literacy outcomes, reduce the gap and, eventually, promote school readiness of low-SES (Socioeconomic Status) children. This study aimed to analyze the feasibility and effectiveness of a brief narrative-based intervention (treatment vs. control group) aimed to foster broad oral language skills in preschoolers (N = 69; Mean age = 5.5, SD = 4 months) coming from low-SES families. Moreover, it was analyzed whether children's initial vocabulary mediates the intervention's responsiveness. Results have shown that children in treatment group obtained greater gains than children in control group in almost all intervention-based measures. There is also some evidence for the generalizability of the intervention to other skills not directly trained during the intervention. Moreover, it was found that children's initial vocabulary mediates the intervention's responsiveness showing that children with high vocabulary made greater gains in higher-level components of language comprehension, whereas children with low vocabulary made higher gains in vocabulary. Taken together, our findings suggest that a relatively brief, but quite intensive narrative-based intervention, may produce improvements on broad oral language skills in preschoolers from low-SES backgrounds
Training needs of counseling trainees in corrections: A survey of clinical directors
As the mental health treatment needs of adults and adolescents within the criminal justice system has garnered increasing attention, the training of mental health professionals has increasingly focused on serving individuals in forensic and correctional settings. We surveyed 55 clinical directors of mental health programs in forensic and correctional settings in a New England state. Respondents reported that Clinical Mental Health Counselors (CMHCs) broadly participated in assessment, treatment and supervision within these programs. Counseling experience emerged as the most important knowledge/experience domain for prospective job applicants and CMHCs were rated as providing a large share of the treatment within these settings. Implication for the education and training of CMHC students are reviewed and discussed
Fostering Broad Oral Language Skills in Preschoolers from Low SES Background
Socioeconomic disparities increase the probability that children will enter school behind
their more advantaged peers. Early intervention on language skills may enhance language and literacy
outcomes, reduce the gap and, eventually, promote school readiness of low-SES (Socioeconomic
Status) children. This study aimed to analyze the feasibility and eectiveness of a brief narrative-based
intervention (treatment vs. control group) aimed to foster broad oral language skills in preschoolers
(N = 69; Mean age = 5.5, SD = 4 months) coming from low-SES families. Moreover, it was analyzed
whether children’s initial vocabulary mediates the intervention’s responsiveness. Results have
shown that children in treatment group obtained greater gains than children in control group in
almost all intervention-based measures. There is also some evidence for the generalizability of the
intervention to other skills not directly trained during the intervention. Moreover, it was found that
children’s initial vocabulary mediates the intervention’s responsiveness showing that children with
high vocabulary made greater gains in higher-level components of language comprehension, whereas
children with low vocabulary made higher gains in vocabulary. Taken together, our findings suggest
that a relatively brief, but quite intensive narrative-based intervention, may produce improvements
on broad oral language skills in preschoolers from low-SES backgrounds
An exploration of the current knowledge on young people who kill: a systematic review
This exploratory systematic review assessed the quality of primary studies on young people who kill and synthesised the findings regarding the characteristics of these offenders. An electronic search yielded 12,717 hits of papers published between 1989 and 2012. Of these, 8,395 duplicates, 3,787 irrelevant hits, and 527 publications not meeting the inclusion criteria of the review were excluded (15 publications were added after searching the grey literature), leaving 23 good quality studies. From these, a further seven were removed due to their small sample size (i.e., n < 30), leaving a total of 16 studies reviewed in detail. A search update was carried out on 2 February 2014 and no further studies meeting the inclusion criteria were found. The results indicate that juvenile homicide offenders are a heterogeneous group and the risk factors for juvenile homicide are cumulative and evolve through life. The findings are mixed, but ten risk factors are identified which appear to be consistent for offenders across the studies reviewed. The limitations of the current review are highlighted and recommendations for future research are outlined, with particular consideration given to improving the quality of the literature in this field
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