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Mental Health & Therapy Issues
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Curriculum Design and Instruction To Teach
Mental Health and Therapy Issues: Taking
Sides:
Author: Charles Hayes:
Special Features Include:
Phases For Conducting A Needs Assessment:
Curriculum Design Supplement:
|a|. Subject-Questions-Answers:
Curriculum Design Plan:
Lesson Plans:
Instructional Goals:
Instructional Objectives:
Instructional Activities:
Instructional Evaluation Techniques:
Standard Vocabulary:
A Limited Glimpse:
Topics Include:
I. Introduction:
Issue 1: Do Diagnostic Labels hinder the Effective
Treatment of Persons with Mental
Disorders?
1. Yes: D.L. Rosenhan, from "On being Sane in
Insane Places," Science:
2. No: Robert L Spitzer, from "On Pseudoscience in
Science, Logic in Remission and Psychiatric
Diagnosis: A Critique of "On Being Sane in Insane
Places,'" Journal of Abnormal Psychology:
The traditional first step in treating a disorder is to
diagnose it-that is, to classify it, give it a name,
label it. But once a label has been affixed, it may
put blinders on the way the problem is seen-
properly or improperly.
Issue 2: Can Suicide Be Rational?
1. Yes: Mary Rose Barrington, from "Apologia for
Suicide," in Suicide: The Ethical Issues:
2. No: Herbert Hendin, from "The Right to Suicide,"
Suicide in America.
We often think of suicide as a final act of
desperation undertaken by a person who must be
emotionally unbalanced even to contemplate such
an act. Aren't their times when suicide may be the
most rational way out of an intolerable situation?
Issue 3: Is Psychotherapy effective?
1. Yes: Julian Meltzoff and Melving Kornreich,
from "It Works," Psychology Today.
2. No: Martin Gross, from The Psycholoical Society:
Treatment for psychological problems is almost as
common nowadays as is treatment for physical
problems. No longer is psychotherapy used
exclusively for patients in mental institutions. Now,
people with all types of problems are going to
therapists. Are these people wasting their time
and money in therapy, or are they getting
significant benefits they cannot gain anywhere
else?
Issue 4: Should Eectroshock Therapy Be
Discontinued?
1. Yes: Leonard Roy Frank, from "Electroshock: A
Paradigm of Psychiatric Tyranny," Issues in
Radical Therapy:
2. No: Harold Sackheim, from "The Case for ECT,"
Psychology Today:
Electrochock therapy has long been used to aid in
the treatment of various emotional disturbances.
Is it an unwarranted and dangerous infringement
on the rights and well-being of patients, or is it a
valuabe and effective therapy that can produce
positive results?
III. REFERENCES:
IV. PAPERBACK:
V. 200 PAGES:
Mental Health and Therapy Issues: Taking
Sides:
Author: Charles Hayes:
Special Features Include:
Phases For Conducting A Needs Assessment:
Curriculum Design Supplement:
|a|. Subject-Questions-Answers:
Curriculum Design Plan:
Lesson Plans:
Instructional Goals:
Instructional Objectives:
Instructional Activities:
Instructional Evaluation Techniques:
Standard Vocabulary:
A Limited Glimpse:
Topics Include:
I. Introduction:
Issue 1: Do Diagnostic Labels hinder the Effective
Treatment of Persons with Mental
Disorders?
1. Yes: D.L. Rosenhan, from "On being Sane in
Insane Places," Science:
2. No: Robert L Spitzer, from "On Pseudoscience in
Science, Logic in Remission and Psychiatric
Diagnosis: A Critique of "On Being Sane in Insane
Places,'" Journal of Abnormal Psychology:
The traditional first step in treating a disorder is to
diagnose it-that is, to classify it, give it a name,
label it. But once a label has been affixed, it may
put blinders on the way the problem is seen-
properly or improperly.
Issue 2: Can Suicide Be Rational?
1. Yes: Mary Rose Barrington, from "Apologia for
Suicide," in Suicide: The Ethical Issues:
2. No: Herbert Hendin, from "The Right to Suicide,"
Suicide in America.
We often think of suicide as a final act of
desperation undertaken by a person who must be
emotionally unbalanced even to contemplate such
an act. Aren't their times when suicide may be the
most rational way out of an intolerable situation?
Issue 3: Is Psychotherapy effective?
1. Yes: Julian Meltzoff and Melving Kornreich,
from "It Works," Psychology Today.
2. No: Martin Gross, from The Psycholoical Society:
Treatment for psychological problems is almost as
common nowadays as is treatment for physical
problems. No longer is psychotherapy used
exclusively for patients in mental institutions. Now,
people with all types of problems are going to
therapists. Are these people wasting their time
and money in therapy, or are they getting
significant benefits they cannot gain anywhere
else?
Issue 4: Should Eectroshock Therapy Be
Discontinued?
1. Yes: Leonard Roy Frank, from "Electroshock: A
Paradigm of Psychiatric Tyranny," Issues in
Radical Therapy:
2. No: Harold Sackheim, from "The Case for ECT,"
Psychology Today:
Electrochock therapy has long been used to aid in
the treatment of various emotional disturbances.
Is it an unwarranted and dangerous infringement
on the rights and well-being of patients, or is it a
valuabe and effective therapy that can produce
positive results?
III. REFERENCES:
IV. PAPERBACK:
V. 200 PAGES:



