Term
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Definition
are comprised of the feelings (emotional connection), thoughts (cognitive), and behaviors (actions) that encompass a person's life |
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Term
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Definition
process in which an individual clarify what they define to be a value. Steps include:
- choosing (explore beliefs and behaviors),
- prizing (teach clients to cherish beliefs), and
- acting (willingness and committment to act on beliefs)
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Term
Values Clarification
(Ch. 18) |
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Definition
method used to help clients through the valuing process; that is, explore what is important to them and build their own value system |
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Term
Individual Clarifying Response
(ch. 18) |
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Definition
strategy used to encourage participants to think about something they said or did while interacting with other people |
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Term
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Definition
Indicators include: goals, aspirations, attitudes, interests, feelings, beliefs, and worries. Indicators can be elevated into values. |
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Term
9 things leaders should understand about clarifying responses
(ch. 18) |
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Definition
- are not moralizing or criticizing
- place responsibility on participants to decide what they want
- are stimulating, but not insistent
- help participants understand their ideas
- do no result in an extended discussion
- are individually tailored
- are not made in response to everything said
- do not provoke "right answers"
- are used creatively
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Term
4 steps to encourage a reflective discussion through a large group discussion
(ch. 18) |
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Definition
- select a topic
- encourage participants to think before speaking
- structure discussion to promote sharing
- help participants learn
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Term
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Definition
includes a provocative statement with questions, or simply a set of questions or fill-in-the-blank statements, designed to raise an issue among the participants
Guides pariticipants through the value-clarifying process |
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Term
Theory of Values Clarification
(ch. 18) |
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Definition
- based on the premise that many people face complicated decisions
- focuses on the belief that people can be helped to clarify their values, which in turn will result in a behavior change
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Term
3 Positive Effects of Values Clarification Strategies on...
(ch. 18) |
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Definition
- Self-esteem
- self-concept
- value awareness
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Term
4 Values Clarification Activities
(ch. 18) |
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Definition
- Leisure Values (participants complete a value sheet circling points on a scale that best describes what leisure means to them)
- Leisure Coat of Arms (sheet that has six numbered sections with different questions in which participants are to draw the answer to those questions in each section)
- Meet Your Values (participants are given 5 values (love, beauty, friendship, truth, and peace) and beside each value they are to indicate a leisure activity that reprents the value and why)
- Values Discussion (participants are divided into groups and review and choose one topic and one by one talk about the topic then when everyone is done they discuss what each person's value was they demonstrated)
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Term
Leisure Education
(Ch. 7) |
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Definition
provide recreation resources and opportunities in order to improve health and well-being |
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Term
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Definition
behavior that is engaging, intrinsically motivated, and chosen, that results in a transformation of reality; appears to involve making believe that one object is another |
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Term
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Definition
conceived as a time when there are few or no obligations to work, school, chores, or other responsibilities; free time is used however one chooses to use it |
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Term
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Definition
associated with an organized activity that people do for enjoyment |
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Term
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Definition
a subjective state of mind when individuals experience a sense of freedom and are motivated to participate in an activity primarily for the enjoyment associated with the activity; leisure is not tied to any one type of activity |
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Term
Leisure Appreciation
(Ch. 7) |
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Definition
Help individuals become more aware of the concept of leisure by helping them gain a deeper understanding of it |
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Term
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Definition
having an understanding of oneself through self-examination (questioning preferences, past involvements, goals, skills, attitudes, and satisfaction related leisure) |
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Term
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Definition
a fundamental skill needed for independent leisure experience
Skills include: making appraisals, forming realistic goals, gathering information, and problem solving |
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Term
Self-Determination
(Ch. 7) |
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Definition
being in control of the course a life takes; perceiving oneself as free and make decisions as one negotiates their life; Taking responsibility for leisure expression (being assertive) |
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Term
Leisure Activity Skills
(ch. 7) |
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Definition
each activity has a unique set of skills required for full participation providing clients with options that will open up the opportunity for self-determination |
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Term
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Definition
enable a person to participate in community-base programs; use of public transportation and money management |
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Term
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Definition
most important skills needed for people with disabilities to be accepted in inclusive community settings
Social Skills include: sharing, cooperating, communicating (verbally/nonverbally), and determining appropriate rules for different situations. |
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Term
Leisure Resources
(Ch. 7) |
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Definition
people, places, and printed materials |
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Term
Theoretical Foundations of Leisure Education
(ch. 7) |
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Definition
Motivation:
- Intrinsic Motivation
(participation in activities for the fun and excitement they experience while participating)
- Goal Orientation
(when a need arise in people, they will try to reduce or eliminate the need by performing behaviors and activities to satisfy these goals)
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Term
Implementations for each component of Leisure Education
(Ch. 7) |
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Definition
Leisure Appreciation: Leisure Bingo (participants fills up leisure activity filled card by writing benefits for each)
Self-Awareness: Innerview (Each participants writes down 5 questions then trade with their partner then they interview each other using the questions the intended for each other but were asked instead)
Decision Making: How to Decide? (activity in which the participants don't know whats in a bag and are asked to choose one, the importance of this is to demonstrate the importance of having information before making decisions)
Self-Determination: Spaced Out (participants plan an imaginary voyage and draws it out then discussed why they chose specific items)
Leisure Activity Skills: (Ask client what the would like to learn more about then consider the setting and contextualize the activity to give it meaning)
Community Skills: Mo'Money, No Money (helps plan big and small budgets, each group gets an imaginary budget then group then makes a plan of how to spend their money on all compents of being able to do an activity
Social Skills: Friendship Tree (draw a tree then label each part according to the directions, group shares what the labeled at the end)
Leisure Resources: Resourcerer (Participants write an activity resource for each letter of the alphabet, at the end of 1 min. participants read theirs earning 1pt for each resource stopping when group # goal is reached) |
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Term
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Definition
a mood or disposition often associated with smiling and laughter |
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Term
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Definition
a release of tension, laughing with others, and satisfaction in the resolution of incongruity |
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Term
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Definition
laughing at the expense of someone else and sarcasm |
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Term
Two common elements of Humor
(Ch. 15) |
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Definition
incongruity and superiority |
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Term
Therapeutic Use of Humor
(ch. 15) |
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Definition
the purposeful application of humor for specified outcomes |
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Term
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Definition
humorous expressions such as stand-up comedy, comic strips in newspapers, and situation comedies on television |
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Term
The Humor Project
(Ch. 15) |
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Definition
Founded by Goodman to help people develop and apply their senses of humor
4 elements:
- Appreciation of "everyday humor"
- Laughing at yourself
- negative and positive humor
- practicing humor skills
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Term
A Tonic You Can Afford
(Ch. 15) |
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Definition
Humor intervention designed by a group of volunteers at a nursing home with goals of reviving dormant senses of humor and developing activities that foster humor repsonses. |
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Term
The Healing Power of Humor
(ch. 15) |
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Definition
3 sections:
- "Learning to Laugh"- discuss benefits of humor & connections between laughing and crying, why people laugh, and minimizing the risks of learning to laugh
- "When You Feel Like Crying"- incorporation humor into difficult situations
- "The Last Laugh"- the use of humor in coping w/ death and discussions of finding humore in illness and death
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Term
How to develop your sense of humor
(ch. 15) |
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Definition
provided cirriculum for humor development:
- experiencing playfulness
- telling jokes
- developing a humorous perspective
- not taking oneself to seriously
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Term
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Definition
Program consisted of an active element (telling a joke) and a passive element (watching/listening to funny tapes, reading about comedians)
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Term
Humor Production Procedure
(Ch. 15) |
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Definition
designed to enhance a sense of humor by having older adults experience laughter generated at the imadinal level
4 steps:
- Participants engaged in relaxation exercise
- guided imagery occured
- facilitator introduced incongruous and exaggerated variables into the scene imagined
- Debreifing
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Term
3 theories of Humor Therapy |
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Definition
- Incongruity Theory (difference between what is expected and what actually happens, Pollio believed that for something to be funny it must have an element of unexpectedness)
- Superiority (Humor and feelings of superiority coincide with one another (i.e. blonde jokes)
- Physchological Release (if people experience humor then they will release tension and be more relaxed)
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Term
3 Benefits of Humor Therapy
(ch. 15) |
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Definition
- Reduced Anxiety
- Increase Pain Thresholds
- Healthy Immune System
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Term
Humor Therapy Implementations
(Ch. 15)
(only listed 2) |
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Definition
"Ha"- (participants circle up close to each one one person start by saying ha, the next person adds on a Ha saying ha ha, each person continues to add a ha. The faciliator instructs to group to keep from laughing.)
"Laugh at yourself"- (participants choose 2 flaws and make a joke out of them and share with the group) |
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Term
3 areas of TR service model Humor Therapy can be used in
(ch. 15) |
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Definition
- Treatment
- Leisure Education
- Recreation Participation
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Term
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Definition
records our feelings and emotions, our knowledge about ourselves and the world, our experiences, and all the performance skills we have acquired |
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Term
3 Types of Memory
(ch. 12) |
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Definition
- Sensory (memories derived from senses)
- Short-term (whatever one is working on at the moment)
- Long-term (information that has been rehearsed and connected; registration (perceived), encoding (attaches meaning), storage, retrieval (recall)
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Term
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Definition
a deliberate, concentrated effort to remember |
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Term
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Definition
a selective process in which memories are evoked and reconstructed, probably with varying degrees of intensity and emotional involvement |
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Term
Therapeutic Reminiscence
(ch. 12) |
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Definition
process a tr specialist takes to retrieve memories from a client, patient, or other individual |
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Term
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Definition
loss of the ability to find the right words |
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Term
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Definition
the loss of the ability to recognize people or things |
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Term
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Definition
the loss in the ability to carry out motor functions |
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Term
6 types of reminiscence
(ch. 12) |
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Definition
- Integrative (associated w/ successful aging)
- Instrumental (associated w/ successful aging)
- Transmissive (passing on one's cultural heritage and personal legacy to others)
- Narrative (characterized by statements of autobiographical facts)
- Escapist (tendency to glorify the past and belittle the present)
- Obsessive (originates from guilt over one's past and is evidenced by statements of guilt, bitterness, and despair reagarding one's past)
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Term
Conducting Reminiscence Programs
2 categories
(ch.12) |
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Definition
- Structure of sessions (choosing topics, selecting the setting, getting started (call client by name, be face to face, make eye contact), listening, speaking (normal tone, show your face), establishing session length)
- Size of Sessions (one-on-one sessions (intimate)and group sessions (receive support from peers)
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Term
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Definition
specific form of reminiscence in which the past is actively evaluated, and conflict is necessary for resolution to occur. It is personal and intense, representing an active grappling with the past in order to come to terms with it.
Three phases: recollection of event, evaluation of that event, and syntesis of that event with other memories |
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Term
Reminiscence 4 social theories of aging:
(ch. 12) |
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Definition
- Role Theory (how well one adjusts to aging depends upn how well the role changes of later life are accepted)
- Disengagement Theory (believe older adults have a natural tendency to withdraw from the greater society and become more introspective)
- Activity Theory (assume that people who are active will be more satisfied and better adjusted than those who are less active)
- Continuity Theory (assert that as we age, we become more of what we already were in our youth)
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Term
Implementations of Reminiscence
(Ch. 12) |
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Definition
- Sensory (create activities based on personal history of client)
- one-to-one verbal (talk with client about things the may refuse to do or use)
- group verbal (tr brings in visual cues and passes them around or has one person at a time pick the item the would like to talk about)
- written (provide materials, identify location to write in, determine topic, establish a time)
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