Therapeutic boarding school
A therapeutic boarding school (TBS), alternatively known as an emotional growth boarding school, is a boarding school based on the therapeutic community model that offers an educational program together with specialized structure and supervision for students with emotional and behavioral problems, substance abuse problems, or learning difficulties.[1][2]
In contrast with residential treatment programs, which are more clinically focused and primarily provide Behaviour therapy and treatment for adolescents with serious issues, the focus of a TBS is toward emotional and academic recovery involving structure and supervision for physical, emotional, behavioral, family, social, intellectual and academic development.[1][3] Therapeutic and educational approaches vary. The typical duration of student enrollment in a TBS range from one to two years. Students may receive either high school diplomas or credits for transfer to other secondary schools.[1] Some therapeutic boarding schools hold educational accreditation.[4]
In his 2005 book, journalist David L. Marcus estimated that dozens of therapeutic schools have been established in the United States since the 1970s, operated by both private corporations and nonprofit agencies.[5] David described one of these schools as follows:[5]
[The school's] curriculum defies easy explanations. It was a patchwork of theories of leading behavioral psychologists of the twentieth century, mixed with techniques from twelve-step programs, California feel-good movements, Big Sur group processing, and Esalen-style encounters. The curriculum drew from the pioneering Swiss philosopher and psychologist Jean Piaget, who believed that children must learn at their own pace. And Erik Erikson, who argued that a person’s ability to resolve conflicts during critical transitions early in life is an indicator for later happiness. And, especially at base camp, [The school] borrowed from Abraham Maslow. He had charted a hierarchy of needs, starting with the physical – air, food, water – and ascending through self-esteem, belonging, love, and finally to truth and beauty.
The school wasn't trying to turn rampaging teenagers into cherubic clones. It was trying to help kids rediscover their talents, to give them tools to deal with inevitable setbacks and pain. [The school] started by reducing newcomers to coping with primordial needs – potable water, shelter, a comfortable temperature. As they fulfilled Maslow’s hierarchy, they started to think about who they really were.
History
Emotional Growth Education
The term "emotional growth education" was created by Linda Houghton in the early 1980s to describe workshops and other specialty programs at the first CEDU School. The term was intended to clearly define how the curriculum used child development principles and healthy stages of growth to create self-esteem and develop greater skills in communication, work ethic, self-awareness and academic study. She used the principles of child development as described by Erik Erikson to bring understanding of the emotional growth workshop curriculum to parents, faculty and referring professionals.[6][7] Ms. Houghton went on to found two schools (Mount Bachelor Academy and the King George School) attempting to refine what she calls "holistic education" or"a new way of looking at things".[8] These schools and programs were designed as models for the integration of emotional growth, academics, the arts and other specialized learning.[7]
There are subtle differences between emotional growth and therapeutic schools. Emotional growth theory developed from the idea that immaturity was the reason for behavior problems in teens. With a tightly structured community where consequences for behavior were immediate and appropriate, the student might learn from his/her mistakes and grow appropriately. However, a strictly emotional growth curriculum is considered ineffective for students with deep-seated trauma or serious psychiatric disorders such as bipolar, anorexia, etc. A TBS will add clinical treatments to the emotional growth curriculum, including medications, for students with more serious disorders.[9] The original emotional growth programs rarely incorporated medications for the students. Over the years, as more schools and programs were created, the term "emotional growth" was used and misused to describe vastly different therapeutic schools that sometimes did not adhere to the basic components needed for true emotional growth education.[7]
Troubled Teen Industry
The National Association of Therapeutic Schools and Programs listed 140 schools and programs as of 2005. Educational consultants say the total number of programs available is closer to 300. The market for this industry appears to be expanding; there seemed to be less of a stigma about seeking therapy today. Educational consultant Lon Woodbury stated "All indications are that the market is still growing. The consensus is that increasing numbers of children are in trouble and are not growing up very well."[10]
Effectiveness
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In 2006, the results of a study[3] conducted between 2003 and 2005 involving 993 students from 9 schools was presented at the 114th Annual Convention of the American Psychological Association. The study made use of the Youth outcome questionnaire certified by BYU in terms of internal consistency, test-retest reliability, and concurrent validity as well as being a valid and reliable self-report measure of psychosocial distress in youth psychotherapy research.[11]
Phoenix Academy (affiliated with Phoenix House Foundation, Inc.) is a SAMHSA program listed in the National Registry of Evidence-based Programs and Practices [NREEP] which uses a residential treatment, therapeutic community model enhanced to meet the developmental needs of adolescents ages 13–17 with substance abuse and other co-occurring mental health and behavioral disorders.[12] Outcome studies atttest to the effectiveness of the enhanced therapeutic community model.[13]
A description of the Phoenix Academy model as described on the NREPP website is as follows: "The Phoenix Academy [therapeutic community] model maintains that substance abuse is an outward manifestation of a broad set of personal and developmental problems in the adolescent and that successful recovery is built upon change involving the whole person—psychologically, socially, and behaviorally. Participants learn to embrace honesty, focus on effective living in the present moment (rather than in the past), accept personal responsibility for their own actions, develop a strong work ethic, and adhere to a strict moral code known as right living. The process for change is behavioral social learning, which takes place in a community of supportive peers and staff who model and support the rehearsal of effective behaviors. Each residential member earns status promotions and other privileges by complying with program rules and expectations and demonstrating specific behaviors toward attaining treatment goals, such as attending school. Behavior that deviates from the community's sober-living norms results in sanctions or loss of previously earned privileges. During treatment, youth progress through treatment phases with increasing program privileges and responsibilities. Days are highly structured, with most waking hours spent in school, community meetings, lectures, groups, individual and family counseling, community service, aftercare services, and recreation."
The Federal Trade Commission has issued guides for parents considering residential treatment programs.[14][15]
Criticism
The disability rights organization, Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law, opposes placement in therapeutic boarding schools, equating them with residential treatment centers. The organization questions the appropriateness and efficacy of group placements, citing failure of some programs to address problems in the child’s home and community environment, lack of mental health services, and substandard educational programs. Concerns specifically related to private therapeutic boarding schools include inappropriate discipline techniques, medical neglect, restricted communication (such as lack of access to child protection and advocacy hotlines), and lack of monitoring and regulation. Bazelon promotes community-based services on the basis that they are more effective and less costly than residential placement.[16]
From late 2007 through 2008, a coalition of medical and psychological organizations that including members of Alliance for the Safe, Therapeutic and Appropriate use of Residential Treatment (ASTART) and the Community Alliance for the Ethical Treatment of Youth (CAFETY), provided testimony and support that led to the creation of the Stop Child Abuse in Residential Programs for Teens Act of 2008 by the United States Congress Committee on Education and Labor.[17]
Jon Martin-Crawford and Kathryn Whitehead of CAFETY testified at a hearing of the United States Congress Committee on Education and Labor on April 24, 2008,[18] where they described practices they considered abusive, which they had experienced, observed, and been told about at the Family Foundation School and Mission Mountain School, both therapeutic boarding schools.[19][20]
See also
References
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External links
- Therapeutic Schools at the Open Directory Project
- Alliance for the Safe, Therapeutic and Appropriate use of Residential Treatment
- Judge David L. Bazelon Center for Mental Health Law
- Community Alliance for the Ethical Treatment of Youth