120 likes | 140 Views
Explore the practice of humanity and humility in neurodiverse "support" work. Emphasizing listening, partnership, and empowering students for self-advocacy.
E N D
Relationship at the Centre: The Heart of Support Work Paul McGahey, Counselling Service and Jacqueline Szumko, English Language Study Unit, Loughborough University
Questions to keep in mind during the Workshop: • Are we comfortable with the term “support”? • Is the implication that the person who offers support is stronger, more able, better? • Do we think we are? • How could our attitudes be affecting our students and the way we approach our work?
Relationship at the Centre: The Heart of Support Work The Practice of Humanity and Humility in in Neurodiverse “Support”
Humanity and Humility • Fundamental assumption = each person’s experience is unique (each person is unique), we don’t know what each person will talk about, each is a new and different person • Consequently we need to listen with fresh ears and eyes – falling into the trap of “we’ve heard it all before” does not respect the student and even makes the student an “object” of our beneficence – a charity case (disempowering)
“Exploratory partnerships” (Herrington, 2001) • Exploratory because we don’t presume to have all the answers – we’re working it out together (the student is the one with the best knowledge of his/her profile, albeit implicit) • Partnership because the tutor and student are equal agents in the relationship (our aim is empower the student).
In an exploratory partnership, the tutor • Understands the power of teacher expectation in relation to student learning • Has strong expectations that student will achieve more control • Expects individuals to change over time • “They [tutors] must work to re-connect learners with their own resourcefulness and to develop their own ‘voices’.” (Herrington, 2001:175)
The student as an agent of his/her own change/progress The client operates on a therapist’s procedures by: • Investing life in them • Thinking about the process • Extracting meaning • Creatively using procedures • Translating therapy experiences into everyday life – to create change. (Bohart, 1999) Sounds familiar?
In an “exploratory partnership” • Students synthesise knowledge and experience and so begin to feel more comfortable in their own skin • Students doing it their way – putting their own spin on strategies presented (which we can use with other students – validation, power sharing) • Students develop their own voices for self advocacy
The Paradoxical Theory of Change “.. . change occurs when one becomes what he is, not when he tries to become what he is not.” (Beisser, 1970:1) (So it’s very important to listen!)
(More) Humility • To listen with fresh ears, we have to continually reassess our practice. • This involves self-examination of our attitudes and intentions (Moon, 2006:1; Bozarth, 2000:5). • We need to “Promote a receptive, listening, open exploratory mindset in contrast to a defensive, overly deliberative, analytic mindset.” (Bohart, 2005:4). • “…I am learning not to be right, but to be better; not to do things for the praise (a predatory attitude), but to value work when it only matters to my horse (patient) and me…” Beutler, p.215 in Bohart)
Collaborative Relationship • “…Therapy is a collaborative relationship between two intelligent agents… Therapy can be seen as facilitating and/or freeing clients’ intrinsic generative self-righting tendencies.” Bohart (2005:1) • Does a similar principle apply in neurodiverse “support” work?