Author Topic: Benefits of Change Academy at Lake of the Ozarks  (Read 10618 times)

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Offline calo

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Benefits of Change Academy at Lake of the Ozarks
« on: October 13, 2009, 08:21:14 PM »
Benefits of  Change Academy at Lake of the Ozarks

You meet and make life long friends
You become very friendly
You tend do always do your homework
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Offline calo

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Why Choose CALO?
« Reply #1 on: October 13, 2009, 08:22:58 PM »
Why Choose CALO?

A Letter from the Founder of CALO:

Across the country there are a number of generalist residential treatment centers. Many of them do fine work. They treat issues and disorders such as Oppositional Defiant Disorder, Conduct Disorder, Depression, Bi-polar Disorder, some personality disorders, phase of life issues, etc. Most work from a behavior modification paradigm. A few are more relationally oriented. A smaller few utilize a community or positive peer culture model. All try to change the lives of struggling teens.

Generalist programs are usually large (80 plus and as many as 250 at times) and level-focused in their treatment approach. In order to manage student behavior they frequently put systems of rewards and punishments in place.

These programs came into being to fill a need created largely by managed care in the healthcare industry. Managed care decreased stays in hospital settings and pushed members to acute care and stabilization treatment. Longer, chronic care and remediation lost its funding source. Managed care effectively ended long stays in psychiatric hospitals. Long stays went away but the need for some sort of longer-term treatment did not. Residential treatment has filled the void left in the wake of decreased lengths of psychiatric hospitalization.

As residential treatment has matured, the one size fits all approach has lost its appeal. There are many presenting problems that are not well grouped together. A program that puts eating-disordered teens with Conduct Disordered ones will feel the strain of the differing needs of those populations. Simply put, specialist care is needed for many emotional and behavioral issues. Eating Disorders, issues of trauma, Reactive Attachment Disorder, non-verbal learning disabilities, substance abuse; these and many other issues demand specialized knowledge and treatment. CALO was created with this need for specialty care in mind.

CALO focuses on only three presenting issues: issues of emotion, trauma, and attachment.
An even more concise way of presenting CALO’s specialty is to say that issues with trauma at their core are what we treat. Trauma during the attachment window will frequently create attachment issues in later adolescence. Trauma will also lay the groundwork for later Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. Trauma will predispose some teens for emotional regulation issues like Bi-polar Disorder or Depression. CALO treats trauma-induced emotional and behavioral problems.

Our theoretical framework is based on attachment research. Our treatment model relies on relationships and attachment interventions to create lasting change. CALO is a relational, attachment-centered program.

The following would be a partial list of the type of teenager CALO would specialize in treating:

A teenage adoptee struggling to connect with parents and caregivers
A teen who has been physically, emotionally, or sexually abused and is now acting out behaviorally
A teen who has survived a trauma and cannot maintain emotional control
A foreign-adopted teen who is not fitting in at home or at school and is draining emotional resources from his/her adopted family
A teen with anger control issues and a history of abuse or neglect
An untrustworthy and sexually promiscuous teenager who does not enjoy deeper connection with family or caregivers
CALO utilizes time, experiential successes, relationships, peer interactions, and specialized environment to reach our troubled teen in a way not done by most other programs. Other generalist programs cannot treat our population as effectively or efficiently as CALO.

We welcome questions about our treatment model. Feel free to contact me at the numbers below.

Sincerely,

Ken Huey, Ph.D., CEO
130 CALO Lane
Lake Ozark, MO 65049
Toll-free direct (866) 459-1364
Main phone line (573) 365-2221
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Offline calo

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canine program
« Reply #2 on: October 13, 2009, 08:25:06 PM »
The canine program is an integral part of the CALO therapeutic model. Through Trust of Care, canines help students develop love, responsibility, and accountability through meeting the physical needs of golden retrievers. Students feed, water, groom, train, exercise, clean up after and, of course, play with canines. Students have daily walks with the canines using our secluded nature trail at the beautiful Lake of the Ozarks.

Students better understand Trust of Control when they learn how to train, discipline, lead, and regulate canine behavior. As students struggle with poor behavior from the dogs and the difficulties of training the canines, students are helped to understand frustrations their parents have similarly felt. This process lays the foundation of students feeling empathy for their parents. Empathy is the fertile soil where attachment can grow. This empathy is gained experientially, not through abstract discussion.

Studies have supported what has been observed at CALO; that canines have a calming effect on humans by regulating blood pressure and heart rate. Dysregulated students have often turned to their safe friend when having a difficult time emotionally. Additionally, golden retrievers provide safe touch through playful and loving acceptance. Students who have been inappropriately touched, abused, or never had the calming physical closeness they deserved earlier in life find safety in learning this safe touch through these amazing creatures.

Students eventually help their canine develop Trust of Self by training and leading the canines to be self-regulated and follow their adolescent leader. Typically, canines don’t respond well unless given clear instructions and communication from a care-giver. As a result, students learn healthy ways to assert themselves and how they send and receive verbal and non-verbal messages. Further, canines quickly acclimate to the rhythm of a student and match his/her energy. Thus, canines provide further feedback to students—when to be calm and in control when it is time to play.

The primary purpose of the canine program is to empower students to experience Interdependence – healthy, affectionate, reciprocal relationships. Canines help accomplish this through their instinctive ability to provide unconditional love. This provides a unique opportunity for the adolescent to practice healthy attachment with a non-threatening friend.

When students make mistakes with the canines, much like parents make errors with their children, the golden retriever forgives the student. This immediate forgiveness allows the student to see the value of being less judgmental, rigid, and forgiving of others and themselves. Most importantly, the process of reciprocity, connection-break-repair, and mutual giving and taking increases a student’s self-worth. As a result, the student is better prepared to face their emotional difficulties knowing they are loved and valued.

All CALO students will have the opportunity to bond with the canines and learn to invest in their physical and emotional needs. Some students will have the opportunity to be a foster parent for a canine and gain the valuable interpersonal and life lessons the canines offer. Other students will have the chance to adopt a canine that will eventually go home with the student at graduation, encouraging a long-term relationship. On a smaller scale, this adoption process mirrors the adoption experience that families go through when adopting a child (application, essays, home study, placement, finalization, etc.). Increased empathy is transferred to the students as they struggle through the adoption journey and realize the work their own adoptive parents endured in welcoming them as a child in their family.

Ultimately, the canine-adolescent relationship allows students to develop an understanding of parental love, something we at CALO refer to as “transferrable attachment.” The very core lesson that countless conversations and traditional talk therapy never taught a student over the years is finally discovered experientially as a student is vulnerable to a loving, safe animal — “If my parents love me more than I love my canine, I do feel safe. I really can trust that they won’t leave me, hurt me or intentionally do harm.”
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Offline calo

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Support from other parents
« Reply #3 on: October 13, 2009, 08:28:09 PM »
Support from other parents
 August 27, 2009 19:19 by  Ken

One of the ways that we try to help families is by finding resources for dealing with issues while a child is still at home, or after a child has been in residential treatment. There are not a lot of that type of resource where a professional can come to your home if you live in a remote area. Even if you live near a big city, frequently there is not a professional around that is trained in working with trauma or attachment issues.  In an information age, the internet can be a tremendous help if you know what to look for. This post is meant to give an idea of where to go for some invaluable help from parents who struggle with attachment and trauma-challenged teens.

The organization is called the “Attachment and Trauma Network (ATN).” If you want to go to their website, type in www.radzebra.org. ATN was created by a mother who adopted some children who were struggling. Nancy Spoolstra was that mom and she was unable to figure out where to go for help. When she eventually found some of the help she needed she began networking in the attachment world and realized that many parents needed some support from other parents. Parents needed a place to look for answers. With that in mind she created ATN and it has been most helpful to hundreds and thousands of families since.

ATN is a true non-profit. There are many links and resources that are free on their site. If you want unlimited access to support groups you can try that out for free for a month or so. Joining costs $35 per year. I believe in what they are doing so much that I joined the board as a volunteer. Take a look at ATN and give me feedback about your thoughts
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Offline calo

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CALO omgili website
« Reply #4 on: October 13, 2009, 08:33:33 PM »
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Offline Curious George

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Re: canine program
« Reply #5 on: October 13, 2009, 09:10:30 PM »
What happens when your trust of care fails?

What happen when your program model fails?

What happens when you're male staff likes to fondle or "tickle" young girls?

What happens when young girls are seen sitting on the laps of your staff members?

What happens when all your lies are exposed?

What happens when we take action?

CG
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Offline calo

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Re: canine program
« Reply #6 on: October 13, 2009, 09:16:55 PM »
Quote from: "Curious George"
What happens when your trust of care fails?

What happen when your program model fails?

What happens when you're male staff likes to fondle or "tickle" young girls?

What happens when young girls are seen sitting on the laps of your staff members?

What happens when all your lies are exposed?

What happens when we take action?

CG

Staff at CALO do not fondle or "tickle" young girls.  The program model is successful due to dedicated staff.  CALO is upront with parents so they know what to expect.  Girls do not sit on the laps of staff members.   What lies are you referring to?
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Offline Curious George

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Re: Why Choose CALO?
« Reply #7 on: October 13, 2009, 09:17:24 PM »
Why  believe propaganda from those who have created it?

Did anyone believe Hitler?  Stalin? Mao? Chang? Idi? Barbra Boxer? or Charles Shumer?

WTF?

CG
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Offline Curious George

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Re: canine program
« Reply #8 on: October 13, 2009, 09:20:27 PM »
I'm referring to what I have personally witnessed.

I have direct personal knowledge that many questionable things go on at CALO that no one wants to admit to.

How can you deny what I have personally seen?

CG
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Offline Curious George

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Re: canine program
« Reply #9 on: October 13, 2009, 09:24:07 PM »
CALO,

I'm waiting...I've seen it.....Calo is in a world of shit.  I'm reputable and have other witnessed other than myself.

You are a bunch of liars.  I will make sure you pay for your lies.

I won't quit.  I will never stop.

CG
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Offline Curious George

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Re: Support from other parents
« Reply #10 on: October 13, 2009, 09:32:18 PM »
Give me their non for profit 401(c) FEIN number so we can 1099 the B.S. you are spewing.'

After all, we would love to tax you for your B.S.
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Offline Curious George

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Re: canine program
« Reply #11 on: October 13, 2009, 09:36:42 PM »
CALO,

Would you like names, faces?

I've been there, I've seen it.  You are full of shit.  I can testify to it and I will.  Test me and you will find out.  I have 3 other witnesses that are just willing to tell the truth.

I'm waiting to see you in person.

CG
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Offline Curious George

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Re: canine program
« Reply #12 on: October 13, 2009, 09:42:51 PM »
CALO,

Let's go...it's time for a fight.

You are a fag, a coward, and a liar.

Step up to the plate and meet me in person.

CG
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Offline Curious George

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Re: canine program
« Reply #13 on: October 13, 2009, 10:02:27 PM »
CALO,

Disclose who you are and I will disclose who I am.

I've witnessed this.  I can tell you names.  I want to tell the world the truth about CALO and what I've personally seen.  Yes, girls do sit on the laps of the staff and yes, I've personally seen staff "tickling" underage girls.  Sucks for you.

Challenge me.  I'll meet you in person.

CG
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Offline Curious George

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Re: Benefits of Change Academy at Lake of the Ozarks
« Reply #14 on: October 13, 2009, 10:36:47 PM »
Ha! Ha! Ha!

You meet what????

What does Caleb think about this?  Has Caleb met friends he would like to spend time with?

CG
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