Chapter 10: Guidance/ Psychoeducational Groups - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 10: Guidance/ Psychoeducational Groups

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Title: Chapter 10: Guidance/ Psychoeducational Groups


1
Chapter 10 Guidance/Psychoeducational Groups
  • Introduction to Group Work, 5th Edition
  • Edited by David Capuzzi, Douglas R. Gross, and
    Mark D. Stauffer

2
Definition of Guidance/Psychoeducational Groups
  • Structured, issue specific, and leader directed
  • Emphasis on learning about a problem or issue
  • Purpose prevention, growth, or remediation
  • Promote growth through knowledge and skill
    building
  • May emphasize self-awareness and self-empowerment
  • Combine some of the therapeutic aspects of
    traditional group counseling with the
    goal-directed emphasis of psychoeducation

3
Benefits
  • Knowledge is empowering.
  • Clients benefit from the universality inherent in
    an issue-specific group.
  • Guidance/psychoeducational groups fit well with
    multiculturalism.
  • They may attract clients who may not be attracted
    to traditional therapy groups.
  • They can be more cost effective because the size
    of the group can be larger.

4
Examples of Guidance/Psychoeducational Groups
  • Groups offered by school counselors addressing
    responsible sexual behavior
  • Groups offered by college counselors addressing
    stress management, relationship skills, diversity
    awareness, conflict resolution, or career
    readiness
  • Groups offered by agency counselors emphasizing
    healthy lifestyle choices for seniors or
    effective parenting strategies for parents of
    adolescents

5
History of Guidance/Psychoeducational Groups
  • Joseph Pratt is credited with beginning the group
    movement by offering groups to tuberculosis
    patients.
  • At the turn of the 20th century, schools began
    offering vocational and moral guidance groups.
  • Since these groups focus on prevention, personal
    responsibility, and empowerment as well as
    incorporating emotional, behavioral, and
    spiritual aspects of change, psychoeducational
    groups are consistent with the current wellness
    model.

6
Primary Purposes of Guidance/ Psychoeducational
Groups
  • Educational Teach members new material through
    lecture, discussion, observation, or
    participation.
  • Skills training Have a strong experiential
    component. The leader models the desired skills.
    Feedback is important.
  • Self-understanding/self-knowledge May resemble
    counseling groups but differ in their lack of
    emphasis on self-disclosure, working through
    resistance, or exploring past relationships.
  • Many groups contain elements of all three.

7
Incorporating Learning Principles
  • When designing learning activities for the group,
    leaders must consider
  • The general characteristics of the group (e.g.,
    age, developmental level, education, cultural
    factors)
  • The learning styles of the group (e.g., auditory,
    kinesthetic, visual)
  • Motivation of the group
  • Anxiety level of the group or individual members

8
Strategies for Incorporating Learning Principles
  • Develop goals and objectives that are specific,
    realistic, and clearly articulated.
  • Incorporate culturally meaningful learning
    activities.
  • Vary methods of introduction to accommodate
    different learning styles.
  • Incorporate active and/or discovery teaching
    methods (e.g., hands on activities, games, etc.)

9
Strategies for Incorporating Learning Principles
  • Tie content to relevant stories or examples.
  • When teaching behavioral skills, break the
    overall task into small stages or component
    parts.
  • Give opportunities for feedback.

10
Planning and Implementing a Psychoeducational
Group
  • Conceptual Phase
  • Developing a statement of purpose
  • This must be an explicit statement of the reason
    for the groups existence and the approach that
    will be taken.
  • A theoretical perspective must be chosen (e.g.,
    insight oriented, behavioral).
  • Group must be conceptualized (e.g., skills based,
    self-awareness, educational, or a combination).

11
Planning and Implementing a Psychoeducational
Group
  • Conceptual Phase
  • Establishing goals
  • Goals indicate how participants may change as a
    result of group involvement.
  • Goals must be consistent with the theoretical
    approach defined in the statement of purpose.
  • Goals should be reasonable and attainable.

12
Planning and Implementing a Psychoeducational
Group
  • Conceptual Phase
  • Setting objectives
  • Objectives specify, generally in behavioral
    terms, the steps needed to reach each group goal.
  • The completion of the objectives should signal
    successful mastery of the goal.

13
Planning and Implementing a Psychoeducational
Group
  • Operational Phase
  • Selecting the content
  • Group content may be organized into three
    categories
  • Didactic Leader uses teaching strategies that
    take into account member development and
    attention span.
  • Experiential Helps members understand the
    material on a personal level. Should be chosen to
    reinforce didactic content.
  • Process Helps members connect the didactic and
    experiential components of the group.

14
Planning and Implementing a Psychoeducational
Group
  • Operational Phase
  • Designing exercises
  • Group exercises must be tailored to address group
    goals and objectives.
  • Exercises should be brief, simple to implement,
    and require active participation.

15
Planning and Implementing a Psychoeducational
Group
  • Operational Phase
  • Performing evaluations
  • Process evaluation Involves soliciting feedback
    during each session and incorporating changes
    when necessary
  • Outcome evaluation Assesses the success of the
    group and can involve measuring goal attainment,
    member satisfaction, or both

16
Effective Group Leadership
  • Develop a clear understanding of the needs of
    group members.
  • Clearly inform group members about the scope and
    nature of the group.
  • Use stage-appropriate interventions.
  • Be aware of therapeutic factors at play.
  • Take the role of therapeutic mentor (e.g., group
    leaders must integrate counseling and teaching
    strategies to provide structured intervention
    that allows for personal reflection and meaning
    making).

17
PsychoeducationalGroups in Clinical Practice
  • Increasing in popularity because of the
    following
  • They can address common needs of clients.
  • They can address serious mental health issues by
    incorporating problem solving and life skills
    components.
  • They can be used to educate persons with
    psychiatric disabilities.
  • They can be used in vocational counseling,
    marriage counseling, family counseling, etc.

18
Guidance Groups in Schools
  • Essential in schools because they can do the
    following
  • Be an effective means of addressing the emotional
    needs of a large number of students as well as a
    myriad of prevention and adjustment issues
  • Can be used to address schoolwide wellness issues
    (e.g., substance abuse, self-esteem, conflict
    resolution)
  • Can be used to address mental health issues in
    schoolchildren (e.g., depression, eating
    disorders)
  • Can be used to help students with vocational and
    academic goals

19
Psychoeducational Groups on College Campuses
  • Benefits
  • They are economical.
  • They can provide an intensity of focus on the
    developmental issue of concern.
  • They provide a natural mode for many of the
    strategies in student development.
  • They provide peer affiliations for the
    traditional-age college populations.

20
Multicultural Considerations
  • Group goals must be congruent with the values of
    the group members.

21
Ethical Considerations
  • A leader must follow all the relevant ethical
    guidelines that all counselors and group leaders
    must follow. Special considerations include the
    following
  • Leaders must clearly articulate the nature of the
    group including criteria for membership
    exclusion.
  • Leaders must stress that confidentiality still
    applies even though the group format may seem
    like a class.
  • Leaders must still communicate with a group
    members other mental health service providers.
  • Leaders must provide referral resources for any
    member in need.
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