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Preparing and Planning for the Rehabilitation Program

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Shirley Steed. Shirley expressed an interest in office work ... Shirley Steed, con't ... Vocational goal and Intermediate Objectives for Shirley Steed, p. 128. 24 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Preparing and Planning for the Rehabilitation Program


1
Preparing and Planning for the Rehabilitation
Program
  • Chapter 8
  • Roessler Rubin
  • 3rd Edition

2
Chapter 8
  • A counselors ability to identify potentially
    appropriate vocational alternatives for a client
    to consider is greatly dependent on the
    sufficiency of information from the intake
    interview, medical evaluation, and other
    necessary specialty evaluations

3
Shirley Steed
  • Shirley expressed an interest in office work
  • Physician ruled out heavy work because of
    varicose veins and emphysema
  • However, with proper medical treatment and
    self-care, Shirley could return to a sedentary
    job requiring little physical exertion

4
Shirley Steed, cont
  • Psychological evaluation revealed personal
    adjustment problems that must be resolved before
    she resumes work (??discussion??)
  • Also, Shirley should avoid work that cause high
    levels of tension or pressure (discussion)

5
Shirley Steed, cont
  • By updating her office/clerical skills, Shirley
    became highly competitive for a number of
    clerical positions
  • Knowing the local job market and Shirleys
    physical, psychosocial, educational,
    intellectual, and interest attributes, the
    counselor was able to select from the vocational
    evaluators list of vocational objectives

6
Shirley Steed, cont
  • From this list of vocational objectives, a number
    of potential job titles were tentatively chosen
    to pursue.
  • The particular job titles were chosen because of
  • Their availability in the local economy
  • Opportunities for advancement
  • Think career not just job

7
  • To help manage and make sense out of all of the
    myriad information sources relating to Shirley,
    the counselor can use
  • Table 8.1 (pgs.115 118)
  • Table 8.2 (pgs. 118 - 120)

8
  • Thorough consideration of client assets and
    limitations provides a basis for identifying the
    services needed to remove or reduce physical,
    psychosocial, or educational-vocational
    limitations for the jobs in question.

9
  • From a practical point of view, these
    rehabilitation services must be available either
    locally or within reasonable traveling distance.
  • The counselor should also have a specific
    provider in mind and an idea of the cost of the
    services.

10
  • The intent of introducing the forms in this
    chapter is not to create new reporting and
    recording demands for the counselor. Rather, the
    purpose of the discussion is to concretize a
    diagnostic thinking process. In thinking through
    the demands on the Information Processing Summary
    form, rehabilitation counselors are involved in
    synthesizing information vital to their
    vocational counseling role.

11
Development of the Rehabilitation Program
  • Co-management A Prerequisite for Vocational
    Planning
  • Client as Colleague
  • Team approach with consumer not hierarchical
    (expert) approach of the medical model

12
  • Client involvement in goal planning results in
    improved therapeutic outcomes for a variety of
    reasons
  • Increases clients knowledge of process
  • Improves precision of goals
  • Strengthens personal motivation to achieve goals
  • Encourages commitment of time and energy

13
  • People participating in rehabilitation who chose
    their own job goals, as opposed to accepting the
    counselors choice, tended to spend more time in
    training and had greater persona earnings at
    closure.

14
  • Choosing vocational goals consistent with ones
    interests is extremely important in the long run
    because congruence between preferred work
    activities and eventual job placement is related
    to higher levels of job satisfaction among
    rehabilitation clients

15
Understanding Vocational Planning
  • Goal Setting
  • Information processing
  • Decision making
  • Planning
  • Action and self-evaluation

16
Goal Setting
  • Establishing a primary objective for
    counselor-client involvement (i.e., employment)
  • Sine qua non
  • Client explores personal images and idealized
    images of self as worker

17
Information Processing
  • Considering all relevant data collected during
    the evaluation process
  • Consumer and counselor jointly explore
  • Evaluation results pertinent to the vocational
    plan
  • Occupational information
  • Client emotions

18
Information Processing, cont
  • Occupational information is introduced to help
    the client understand the day-to-day demands,
    rewards, and frustrations of the work world
  • Issues affecting the feasibility of various
    vocational choices, e.g., distance to job
  • Employment opportunities are closely tied to the
    state of the economy and to the natural resources
    or attributes of a given geographic area

19
Information Processing, cont
  • Affective components
  • What are reasons you (client) are unemployed now?
  • What are some of the things you want from a job?
  • What personal accomplishments give you a sense of
    pride?
  • But dont lose sight of reality

20
Decision Making
  • Selecting a vocational goal to guide the
    development of the rehabilitation plan
  • Local job opportunities
  • Personal preferences for extrinsic and intrinsic
    reinforcers
  • Skills, self-images, and vocational interests
  • Impact of the choice on ones own lifestyle and
    the lifestyle of ones family

21
Decision Making, cont
  • Balance Sheet
  • Gains and losses for self
  • Gains and losses for others
  • Approval or disapproval by others (social
    approval)
  • Self-approval or self-disapproval
  • See Shirleys balance sheet, Table 8.3, p. 126

22
Planning
  • Identifying intermediate objectives and
    rehabilitation services pertinent to the
    vocational goal and developing the steps of an
    action plan
  • Goal analysis
  • Physical functioning (medical condition)
  • Psychosocial functioning (personal problems)
  • Educational-vocational functioning
  • Special considerations

23
Planning, cont
  • Vocational goal and Intermediate Objectives for
    Shirley Steed, p. 128

24
Action and Self-Evaluation
  • Following the action plan, using available data
    to evaluate progress, and making necessary course
    corrections when warranted by results

25
The Individualized Written Rehabilitation Plan
(IWRP)
  • Now called the Individual Plan for Employment
    (IPE)
  • IWRP, IPE, IEP, IHP, IRP, IPP, etc. are all
    functionally the same type of document. Each
    specifies what is going to occur, who is
    responsible for bringing the events about, and
    the time frames for achieving each step.
  • Should be individualized (hence the name!), but
    in reality..

26
IWRP
  • The rehabilitation goal (i.e., vocational goal)
  • Intermediate rehabilitation objectives
  • Objective criteria, evaluation procedures, and
    schedules for determining whether the
    rehabilitation goal and intermediate objectives
    are being achieved
  • Jointly planned vocational rehabilitation services

27
IWRP, cont
  • The projected dates initiating and completing
    services (i.e., the anticipated duration of
    services)
  • The clients views regarding the planned
    objectives and services
  • The date for a periodic review of the program

28
Rehabilitation Goal
  • May be a specific job, including the nine-digit
    DOT code
  • If possible, should include specific vocational
    objective, expected date of completion/accomplishm
    ent, and diagnostic rationale

29
Intermediate Objectives
  • To reach vocational objective, major gains must
    be made in physical, psychosocial,
    educational-vocational, and special
    considerations areas by the client
  • Intermediate goals emanate from the goal analysis

30
Intermediate Objectives, cont
  • Appropriate objectives state the action or
    behavior the individual is expected to be capable
    of, the extent, level or amount of the desired
    behavior, and the date by which the person should
    be able to perform the desired behavior.

31
Progress Evaluation
  • Goal and objectives must be stated in observable
    and measurable terms
  • Dates for progress and completion need to be
    specified
  • Identification of outcome information
  • Accountability

32
Shirley Steeds IWRP
  • Table 8.5, pgs. 132-134
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