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Reaching Today's Youth

ISSN 1091-4706
Volume 2 Issue 4 Summer 1998
Successful Transitions
Table of contents
SUCCESSFUL TRANSITIONS
2 Coming Home: What's Working in Transitions from Restrictive Settings /
Lewis
Polsgrove
Innovative School-Based Approaches to Transition
4 Heavy Mettle: Stories of Transition for Delinquent Youth /
Eileen
Mayer Yellin, Mary Magee Quinn, & Catherine Corinne Hoffman
9 Using a Paraeducator to Facilitate School Reentry /
Lori A. Emsperger
13 Building a Sense of Belonging: The PALS Program /
Mary Elizabeth McNeil
17 More Than a Game: Eight Transition Lessons Chess Teaches /
Mark Kennedy
20 Reaching Resistant Youth Through Writing /
Teresa Skramstad
Aiding Youth, Families. and Communities in Transition
25 Personal Futures Planning for Youth with EBD /
JoAnne Malloy, Douglas
Cheney, David Hagner, Gail M. Cormier; & Steve Bernstein
30 One Family's Adventures in Transition / Patricia Harmon
34 Helping Parents Navigate the Transition Labyrinth /
Karen L. Barnes, Hope
Currin, & Mary Ann Gray
37 Self-Determination: An Essential Element of Successful Transitions /
Sharon
Field & Alan Hoffman
41 IDEA, Advocacy, and You / Sherry L. Kolbe
Promising Community-Based Practices in Facilitating Transitions
44 Seven Best Practices in Transition Programs for Youth /
Nicole
Deschênes & Hewitt B. Clark
49 How Wraparound Can Help Overcome Three Common Barriers to Successful Transition
Services / John D. Burchard
52 Preventing Restrictive Placements through MST /
Tamara L. Brown & Scott W.
Henggeler
57 Meeting the Needs of Children and Youth with Challenging Behaviors Module 8 /
Lyndal
M. Bullock & Ann Fitzsimons-Lovett
64 Three Service Delivery Components of Community-Based Transition Programs /
Michael
Bullis & Michael R. Bent
From the Guest Editor
Coming Home:
What's Working in Transitions from Restrictive Settings
Lewis Polsgrove
Most parents and professionals working with youth with emotional or behavioral
disorders have experienced the joy of witnessing a youngster make tremendous advances in
his or her personal development. But jubilation can quickly turn to despair when successes
lapse into the same behavioral patterns that required intervention. Often such
"treatment" failures lead to blame-laying. Professionals tag parents as the
"cause" of the youngster's problems; parents see professionals as ineffectual;
the youth may become discouraged and ebb into hopelessness. When such breakdowns occur,
everyone loses.
Professionals and families alike need to have confidence that the service
approaches they select for their young people will produce significant and lasting
positive outcomes. But just how much faith can we place in traditional intervention
approaches? Not much, as it turns out. For example, studies have consistently shown that
standard psychotherapy is no more effective than none at all (Levitt, 1971; Weisz, Weiss,
& Donenberg, 1992). Although children and youth continue to be placed in residential
facilities at an alarming rate, hospitalization (at an average cost of $500 a day) has
proven expensive (Burns & Freidman, 1990), largely ineffective, and perhaps even
detrimental as a service option (Sondheimer, Schoenwald, & Rowland, 1994). Various
types of juvenile prevention and rehabilitation programs have also largely failed to
produce permanent changes in behavior(Kazdin, 1987; Mulvey, Arthur, 1998 & Reppucci,
1993). Behavioral interventions, which have proven highly effective in producing immediate
short-term changes, often fail to generalize across environments or over time (Baer, Wolf,
& Risley, 1987). And although social skills training is a popular response to
children's difficulties, recent reviews cast considerable doubt on its effectiveness
(Kavale, Mathur, Forness, Rutherford, & Quinn, 1997).
Such consistently disappointing results can lead parents and professionals to
the impression that "nothing works." But such a conclusion is far from the
truth. We have all used strategies that do work with individual youngsters, and the
professional literature abounds with descriptions of effective techniques and programs.
However, we have not discovered a single "magic bullet" that will produce
lasting and significant positive changes with all troubled or difficult youth in all
settings under all conditions. These children and their families face complex and chronic
difficulties. Like biomedical approaches to containing catastrophic diseases, we seem to
be realizing that a combination of strategies over a long time span is the most effective
approach (Borduin et al., 1995).
* * *
This issue of Reaching Today's Youth extends the quest for promising
solutions to assisting youth who have emotional or behavioral challenges as they
transition from restrictive placements, such as hospitals, residential schools, and
correctional facilities, back to natural, community settings. For this task, we have
assembled a variety of writers-researchers, practitioners, and parents - to share
approaches they have used to facilitate successful transitions. This collection of
articles offers a spectrum of practices that range from techniques for individual
youngsters to multi-strategy approaches that can be implemented in the larger community.
We have grouped articles for this issue into three categories: innovative
school-based strategies to facilitate transition, techniques to aid families and
individual youth in transition, and promising community-based approaches. In the first
category:
- Eileen Yellin, Mary Quinn, and Catherine Hoffman share the voices of four youth
in transition to illustrate how successful transition outcomes are often difficult to
predict when commonly identified "protective factors" are used as the only
guide.
- Lori Ernsperger describes how, as a consultant, she trained a paraeducator to
provide a successful in-school program of support for a youngster with severe oppositional
behavior who had recently returned to public high school after a year of residential
placement.
- Mary McNeil offers a unique solution to the challenges of transition by pairing
youngsters who have various types of disabilities with trained peer mentors who provide
them with needed support in academic, social, and advocacy arenas.
- Mark Kennedy describes how the game of chess can facilitate eight positive
transitions for young people, Teresa Skramstad reveals how transitions are facilitated
when youngsters can connect with at least one academic activity in school - the process of
writing.
In relation to practices that facilitate the transition process for families and
youth:
- JoAnne Malloy and her colleagues show how they have used a personal futures
planning process and the McGill Action Planning System (MAPS) format to base transition
planning on a youngster's interpretation of his or her history, strengths, fears, and
goals.
- Patricia Harmon shares the story of her son's own experiences with transition,
presenting a parent's view on what does and does not work in the transition process.
- Karen Barnes, Hope Currin, and Mary Ann Gray provide five concrete
recommendations on how to make navigating the labyrinth of transition services a little
easier for parents and educators alike.
- Sharon Field and Alan Hoffman describe the crucial role of self-determination for
youth in ensuring successful transitions.
- Finally, Sherry Kolbe describes how parents and educators can use the tools of
advocacy to ensure the most effective and legally appropriate services for youth with
special needs under the new IDEA Amendments of 1997.
In the promising community-based approaches category:
- Nicole Deschênes and Hewitt Clark report on a study they have recently completed
that identified seven components of effective transition programs across the country
through a survey of 254 such programs and site visits to 9 of them.
- John Burchard, who developed wraparound services in Vermont, shares his views on
three major shortcomings of traditional, categorical services and presents the case for
the individualized services that wraparound provides, based on the needs of youths and
their families.
- Tamara Brown and Scott Henggeler describe the "multisystemic" therapy
(MST) treatment that has produced impressive and long-term successes with a wide range of
children with emotional and behavioral disorders.
- Lyndal Bullock and Ann Fitzsimons-Lovett continue their series of professional
development workshop outlines in a session on teaching youth to manage their anger.
- Finally, Michael Bullis and Michael Bent describe three crucial components of the
effective community-based transition programs they have developed and studied.
With varying degrees of rigor, each of these approaches has been field-tested
and demonstrated to be effective. We hope readers find in this rare cross section of
perspectives on facilitating the transition of youth with emotional or behavioral
disorders not only new strategies, but cause for renewed faith that "some things do
work."
REFERENCES
Baer, D. M., Wolf, M. M., &
Risley, T. R. (1987). Some still-current dimensions of applied behavior analysis. Journal
of Applied Behavior Analysis, 20, 313-327.
Borduin, C. M., Mann, B. J., Cone,
L. T, Henggeler, S. W., Fucci, B. R., Blaske, D. M., & Williams, R. A. (1995).
Multisystemic treatment of serious juvenile offenders: Longterm prevention of criminality
and violence. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 63, 569-578.
Burns, B. J., 6t Friedman, R. M.
(1990). Examining the research base for child mental health services and policy. The
Journal of Mental Health Administration, 17, 87-97.
Kavale, K. R., Mathur, S. R.,
Forness, S. R., Rutherford, R. B., 8r Quinn, M. M. (1997). Effectiveness of social skills
training for students with behavior disorders: A metaanalysis. In T E. Scruggs Br M. A.
Mastropieri (Eds.), Advances in learning and behavioral disabilities (Vol. II,
pp. 1-26). Greenwich, CT: JAI.
Kazdin, A. E. (1987). Treatment of
antisocial behavior in children: Current status and future directions. Psychological
Bulletin, 102, 187-203.
Levitt, E. E. (1971). Research on
psychotherapy with children. In A. E. Bergin & S. L. Garfield (Eds.), Handbook of
psychorherapy and behavior change: An empirical analysis. New York: Wiley.
Mulvey, E. P., Arthur, M. W.,
& Reppucci, N. D. (1993). The prevention and treatment of juvenile delinquency: A
review of the research. Clinical Psychology Review, 13, 133-167.
Sondheimer, D. L., Schoenwald, S.
K., & Rowland, M. D. (1994). Alternatives to the hospitalization of youth with a
serious emotional disturbance. Journal of Clinical Child Psychology, 94(23
suppl.), 7-12.
Weisz, J. R., Weiss, B., &
Donenberg, G. R. 11992). The lab versus the clinic: Effects of child and adolescent
psychotherapy. American Psychologist, 47, 1578-1585.
About the Guest Editor
Lewis Polsgrove is a
professor of special education at Indiana University, Bloomington, where he has taught
teachers strategies for teaching children self-control for the past 25 years. In previous
lives, he has worked as a clinical psychologist, counselor, and teacher of children and
youth with emotional and behavioral disorders in mental health and correctional
institutions. He has served as both treasurer and president of the Council for Children
with Behavioral Disorders. His current research interests include personnel preparation
and developing a system of comprehensive services. |