百家乐怎么玩-澳门百家乐官网娱乐城网址_网上百家乐是不是真的_全讯网888 (中国)·官方网站

 

Individual Counselling: Secondary School (Social Worker Strategies)

Introduction

In this part, social workers or counsellors will learn how to use Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) to evaluate and challenge secondary school students’ irrational beliefs in individual counselling situations.

To help students continue to be self-reflective, social workers or counsellors should teach them about A-B-C theory, types of irrational beliefs, ‘thinking traps’ and related areas. When counselling different types of students, social workers or counsellors should evaluate these students’ irrational beliefs in different ways, and use different skills to challenge irrational beliefs and construct new, rational beliefs.

Proactive Aggressor

Wai's case

Wai was a bully in the school. One day, when Wai found an introverted classmate looking at her phone in a corner of the school, Wai and her gang began to tease the classmate. Wai grabbed her classmate’s phone and threw it back to her gang, one of whom then intentionally dropped it on the floor. Even though the teacher noticed the incident, Wai argued that she was just trying to discipline the classmate for the teacher. The victim did not accuse Wai of bullying, because she was afraid that Wai would retaliate, so the teacher had no reason to follow up the incident.

Wai's considerations and actions
Cognition
  • Well-planned: has clear division of labour with her gang, so that the bullying cannot easily be discovered.
  • Goal orientated: Wai’s aim is to demonstrate her strength.
  • Good at estimating the pros and cons: Wai knows that she would not benefit from selling the phone, and that it would be disadvantageous to her if the incident escalated.
  • Underestimates the negative consequences: she does not consider the possibility that the teacher may discover the truth and follow up the incident. She assumes that she will be able to avoid blame.
Emotion
  • Calm and rational: she does not panic, even when discovered by the teacher.
  • Lacking empathy: Wai gains satisfaction from teasing others and ignores her classmates’ feelings.
Behaviour
  • Likes to challenge authority: by denying the teacher any means of following up the incident, she gains a sense of success.
  • Self-centred: all of her actions are in her own interest and she does not consider the feelings of others.
Social Network
  • Plays a leadership role: she is the leader of the gang and often bullies others in the gang.
  • Demands that peers need to obey her: Wai uses threats and inducements to persuade others to do what she wants.

Evaluate irrational beliefs

  • Teach proactive-aggressor students about the dynamic relationship between anticipated events, beliefs, consequences and emotions.
  • Try to understand the purposes behind their behaviours, and the benefits that they seek.
  • Determine proactive-aggressor student’s values and their forms of aggressive behaviour, and assess their irrational beliefs and ‘mind-traps’.

Driven by benefits, proactive aggressors display aggressive behaviour. Thus, it is necessary to understand the purposes behinds their behaviour and thus to understand the values of the aggressors and awaken their motivation to make necessary positive changes.

At the evaluation stage, by understanding proactive aggressor students’ personal values and discussing their planning of and attitudes towards the incidents, social workers can uncover the students’ irrational beliefs and ‘mind-traps’. When disputing irrational beliefs, it is easier for students to analyse the incidents that they have experienced personally.

Dispute irrational beliefs

  • Use realistic evidence to counter proactive-aggressor students’ irrational beliefs.
  • Help these students recognise the negative consequences of their negative behaviour on themselves and those they care about.
  • ? Help these students critique their own irrational beliefs by assessing whether these beliefs are 'reasonable, fair and rightful'.

Because proactive aggressors have strong cognitive ability, it is necessary to help them to repeatedly check whether their beliefs are reasonable or irrational. Social workers can use the ‘reasonable, fair and rightful’ framework to identify irrational beliefs.

Fair: because proactive aggressors lack empathy, they are unsympathetic to, and even derive satisfaction from, the negative effects of their behaviour on victims. Social workers should help proactive aggressors to understand that they must take other people – not just those whom they love, and who love them – into consideration in their thoughts and behaviours.

Reasonable: proactive aggressors always rationalise their aggressive behaviour and use different reasons to support their actions. Social workers can challenge these reasons with logic and objective evidence, and help proactive aggressors to understand that their thoughts and behaviour should be supported by objective evidence and acceptable to society. Proactive aggressors will revise their negative thoughts and behaviour once they realise that they do not have sufficient reasons to support them.

Rightful: proactive aggressors always only focus on their personal benefits and do not care about other people or the negative consequences of their actions on other people. Social workers should help proactive aggressors to understand that their thoughts and behaviour should comply with societal norms, and take consequences into account.

Back to Top

© 2019 City University of Hong Kong          Project on Children and Adolescents at Risk Education (Project C.A.R.E.)
喜达百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| 澳门足球博彩| 澳门百家乐规则| 凯旋门娱乐城开户| 百家乐官网赌场玩法技巧| 金海岸百家乐娱乐城| 湘阴县| 百家乐游戏奥秘| 新乐园百家乐娱乐城| 金都百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 | 百家乐官网那里最好| 爱玩棋牌官方下载| 德州扑克怎么算牌| 百家乐官网技巧| 百家乐论坛| 金樽百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 御金百家乐官网娱乐城| 大发888出纳柜台登入| 百家乐破解打法| 网上百家乐官网投注法| 榆次百家乐的玩法技巧和规则| 百家乐官网l23| 六合彩投注网| 金鼎百家乐官网局部算牌法| 云鼎百家乐官网的玩法技巧和规则| 阿鲁科尔沁旗| 百家乐凯时赌场娱乐网规则| 玩百家乐官网技巧巧| 利来国际娱乐| 大发888更名网址6222| 优博家百家乐娱乐城| 乐天堂百家乐官网娱乐场| 翼城县| 百家乐棋牌游戏币| 赌百家乐怎样能赢| 网上百家乐官网必赢玩| 百家乐官网路单破解软件| 体育投注| 顶级赌场是真的吗| 大发888娱乐场存款| 如何赢百家乐的玩法技巧和规则 |