Julian Rappaport
Julian Rappaport received his PhD from the University of
Rochester. He is a professor in the Clinical/Community and
Social-Personality-Organizational divisions in the Psychology Department at the
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. His primary interest spans the broad
domain of community psychology, a field that he first conceptualized in 1977
with the publication of Community Psychology: Values, Research and Action
(Holt, Rinehart, & Winston) and most recently with the Handbook of Community
Psychology. Rappaport’s general interests span multiple levels of analysis,
including social policy. His empirical research has been concerned with
alternatives to professional care, particularly for those who are outside the
mainstream of economic and social power. Substantive topics of his include
juvenile justice, empowerment, self and mutual help especially for people with a
history of serious mental illness, and school consultation and community
organization with attention to the education of poor and minority children. Some
of the theories and methods that he applies to his current work include
collaborative and qualitative research, empowerment and narrative theory, and
identity in the context of personal and social change.
Session I- Community Narratives and Personal Stories: A
Framework for Thinking About the Art of Social and Individual Change
Narratives and stories have powerful effects on memory,
meaning, emotion and identity, including possible selves. These effects have
been known and used throughout history, often in the form of artistic
representation of community narratives. Historical and contemporary examples
will be presented, with an eye toward how those concerned with redeeming
difficult hope may make use of this powerful phenomenon for both understanding
and action. Research examples from a contemporary church community, a mutual
help organization for the seriously mentally ill, and a public elementary school
will be discussed.
Session II- The Mutual Help Alternative for People with a
History of Serious Mental Illness
Research findings from a collaborative longitudinal study
of people with a history of serious (chronic) mental illness will be presented.
Data from both quantitative and qualitative research is provided to help
understand how an organization, run entirely by former mental patients, without
benefit of professional training or control, is able to provide support for
their peers. Illustrations include data to support the notion that people who
engage in mutual help (with its narrative of shared responsibility) are likely
to experience themselves and their problems in living differently than those who
engage in (excellent) professional help with its bio-medical, individual
responsibility narrative.
REDEEMING DIFFICULT HOPE:
HELPING SPECIAL POPULATIONS
The Fuller Graduate School of Psychology offers this
two-day continuing education conference as an important part of its 40th
anniversary celebration. Both conference and anniversary celebration share the
theme Redeeming Difficult Hope. Conference workshops will focus on
community psychology: specifically, the practice of psychology within a
diversity of local cultures where hope is sometimes difficult to find.
Attendees will come away with a better understanding of the relationship between
individuals and communities in the restoration of persons to wholeness.
This conference will be beneficial to
·
Clinical psychologists
·
Therapists at all levels of experience
·
Social workers
·
Other healthcare professionals
·
All who work with special populations
A total of 9.5 units of continuing education credit are
available with either prior or on-site registration.
Fuller Theological
Seminary Graduate School of Psychology is approved by the American Psychological
Association to offer continuing professional education for psychologists. Fuller
Theological Seminary Graduate School of Psychology maintains responsibility for
the program.
CONFERENCE SCHEDULE
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2006
8:30
a.m. PLENARY SESSION WITH JULIAN RAPPAPORT
Community Narratives and Personal Stories: A Framework for Thinking About the
Art of Social and Individual Change 1.5 CE Units
10:00
a.m. CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1 CE Unit
Risk and Resilience:
Enhancing Competency Amidst Adversity for Vulnerable Young Children in the 5th
Largest City in the U.S.
John Fantuzzo, Diana
Riklis Professor at the University Pennsylvania and Director of the Penn CHILD
Research Center
This workshop will present a conceptual framework
for advancing mental health science and practice for vulnerable young children
in a large urban city. Population-based research will illustrate why strategic
early childhood intervention is critical for the social adjustment and academic
achievement of low-income urban children.
The Problem of Pain Revisited: Some Insights and
Implications for
Practitioner-Scholars in the
New Millennium
Rich Butman, Professor of
Psychology, Wheaton College
This presentation will synthesize key themes
evident in the interdisciplinary literature with insights offered by those going
through agonizing struggles. In today’s world it is imperative that those who
offer comfort to others in difficult times have a solid understanding of
accumulated wisdom--and can translate that into practical counsel.
11:00 a.m. CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1 CE Unit
Tending our
Agonizing Seeds: A Re-examination of Cultural Resilience in African-American
Families
Howard Stevenson, Associate
Professor, Applied Psychology and Human Development Division, University of
Pennsylvania Graduate School of Education
Derek McNeil,
Professor of Psychology, Wheaton College
This presentation will
discuss and demonstrate the use of cultural resources to enhance resilience in
African-American families, particularly in marital, parent-child, and
youth-youth interactions. Psychological interventions must encompass cultural
values to improve the healthy functioning of these families.
Applications of Errorless
Learning for Psychiatric Rehabilitation: The Cure for the Common Flaw
Robert Kern, Associate
Research Psychologist, UCLA Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences,
and Department of Veterans Affairs Mental Illness Research, Education, and
Clinical Center (MIRECC)
This course will provide an overview of the scope and severity of neurocognitive
deficits associated with schizophrenia, present findings about how these
deficits are related to key areas of functional outcome, and illustrate how this
knowledge can be applied to developing innovative training interventions.
1:00 p.m. CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1 CE Unit
Asian Americans: Mobilizing the Adaptive Features
of Interdependence
Gordon Nagayama Hall, Professor
of Psychology, University of Oregon
A
major cultural difference between Americans of East Asian origin and other
American ethnic groups is an emphasis on interdependence. The goal for effective
interventions with Asian Americans may be to emphasize interdependence and
integrate individuals into their ethnic community, which can take many forms.
Patients with Chronic
Neurological Disorders: A Community Population Desperately in Need of Clinical
Psychology
Gail Murdock, Assistant
Professor of Clinical Neurology, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern
California
This workshop will focus on identification of the
unique emotional and psychological needs of a neurological population,
specifically addressing Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis, and epilepsy.
Psychological and family treatment options for patients with neurological
disorders will be explored.
2:30 p.m. CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1 CE Unit
Reconciliation and Healing of
Persons in L’Arche Communities for the Developmentally Disabled
Kevin Reimer,
Associate Professor of Graduate Psychology,
Azusa Pacific University
This interactive workshop will focus on the reconciliation and healing of
persons through a simple candle ritual of the L’Arche communities. We will
discuss how artifacts can serve as external scaffolds for collective
problem-solving and meaning, and how this helps a community equalize religious
experience for disabled and caregivers alike.
Overcoming Unintentional Racism in the Helping
Professions
Charles Ridley, Professor of
Counseling Psychology, Indiana University; Associate Dean, University Graduate
School
This seminar sets forth a different approach to racism—conceptualizing it in
terms of its consequences, not its causes. Helping professionals must identify
their individual and institutional practices that unwittingly result in
deleterious consequences for minority consumers—and once identified, change
their interventions.
3:30 p.m. PLENARY SESSION WITH JULIAN RAPPAPORT
The Mutual Help Alternative for People with a History
of Serious Mental Illness
1 CE Unit
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2006
9:00
a.m. CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1 CE Unit
Effective
Therapy with the Family of a Special Needs Child
Ross Porter,
Clinical Psychologist and
Founder,
Stillpoint Resources
A family with a special needs child encounters unique and
potentially destructive stressors. This workshop will present the latest
empirical findings related to the emotional life of these special families, and
how to most effectively intervene at each level of the family system in order to
facilitate healing and growth.
Mental Health and
Spirituality in the San Carlos Apache People: Redeeming Hope through
Postcolonial Practices
Thea Wilshire,
Clinical Coordinator, San Carlos Apache Wellness Center
This presentation will discuss the history of American policy leading to
genocide and cultural annihilation of Native Americans, with focus on the
experiences of the San Carlos Apache people. Practical applications will be
explored to redeem hope among Native Americans through postcolonial counseling
and incarnational ministry.
10:00
a.m. CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1 CE Unit
The Struggle to Find Hope for
Street Children in Lima, Peru: The Possibility of a Resilient Identity for
Society’s Most Despised
Danielle Speakman, Clinical
Psychology Intern, the Danielsen Institute, Boston University
This course will address the challenges facing
street children in Lima, Peru, in particular pertaining to the obstacles street
children face as they seek to establish their identity and sense of self. The
course will also examine how the self-identities of street children relate to
their ability to be resilient within their communities.
To Protect and Serve: Role of
a Mental Health Professional in Law Enforcement
Luann Pannell, Police
Psychologist, Los Angeles Police Department
This workshop will examine the
role of mental health professionals in police departments, including the many
ways of adding value and influence to the organization, the community, and the
individuals who police our streets. It will offer an overview of the police
population and the relationships between police, community, and media.
11:00
a.m. CONCURRENT SESSIONS
1 CE Unit
Keep Your Head Up: All Grown and Living with
Perinatal HIV/AIDS in Harlem
Ezer Kang, Staff
Psychologist, Department of Pediatric Psychiatry, Columbia-Presbyterian Medical
Center and Harlem Hospital Center
This workshop will provide a historical review of
perinatal HIV in the U.S. and discuss how the evolving field of developmental
psychopathology offers an integrative framework to guide our understanding of
development among adolescents living with perinatal HIV—looking at
socio-emotional functioning, peer relationships, and family relations.
Do Mental Health Services Have Value in
Indigenous Communities?
Catherine Koverola,
Professor and Chair, Department of Psychology,
University of Alaska Fairbanks
This presentation will consider whether western mental health systems have
anything to offer to a people largely decimated by Euro-American influences. The
presentation will draw upon Dr. Koverola’s experience as service provider and
clinical researcher with Canadian Aboriginal communities and Alaska natives.
For more details on the learning outcomes of each
session, please visit www.celebrating40year.com.
Representative Publications for Julian Rappaport
Rappaport, J., & Seidman, E. (Eds.) (2000). Handbook of
Community Psychology. New York: Plenum/Kluwer.
Wiley,
A., & Rappaport, J. (2000). Empowerment, wellness and the politics of
development. In D. Cicchetti, J. Rappaport, I. Sandler, & R. Weissberg (Eds.),
The promotion of wellness in children and adolescents.
Thousand
Oaks, CA: Sage.
Rappaport, J. (2000). Community narratives: Tales of terror and joy. American
Journal of Community Psychology.
Rappaport, J. (1998). The art of social change: Community narratives as
resources for individual and collective identity. In X. B. Arriaga & S. Oscamp
(Eds.), Addressing community problems.
Thousand Oaks,
CA: Sage.
Kloos,
B., McCoy, J., Stewart, E., Thomas, E., Wiley, A., Good, T., Hunt, G., Moore,
T., & Rappaport, J. (1997). Bridging the gap: A community-based, open-systems
approach to neighborhood and school consultation. Journal of Educational and
Psychological Consultation, 8, 175-196.
Thomas, R., & Rappaport, J. (1996). Art as community narrative: A resource for
social change. In M.B. Lykes, R. Liem, A. Banuazizi, & M. Morris (Eds.),
Myths about the powerless: Contesting social inequalities (pp. 317-336).
Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
Mankowski, E., & Rappaport, J. (1995). Stories, identity and the psychological
sense of community. In R. Wyer, Jr. (Ed.), Advances in social cognition
(pp. 211-226) (Vol. 8).
Hillsdale,
NJ:
Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates.
Humphreys, K., & Rappaport, J. (1994). Researching self-help/mutual aid groups
and organizations: Many roads, one journey. Applied and Preventive Psychology,
3, 217-231.
Humphries, K., & Rappaport, J. (1993). From the community
mental health movement to the war on drugs: A study in the definition of social
problems. American Psychologist, 48(8), 892-901.
Contact Fuller Theological Seminary
Fuller Theological Seminary
135 N. Oakland Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91182
800-238-5537--Admissions
800-235-2222--All other inquiries
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