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Messages - former CEDU therapist

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Welcome! Tell us your story.

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On 2004-05-16 19:14:00, Anonymous wrote:

" I am a Cedu survivor. It makes me throw up thinking about my life at cedu when I was there. If you or anyone you might know has any questions about cedu schools, sueing, or teen rights, please im me at chatterbox1239. It is important if I can help any child , parent, or loved one get out or make CEDU suffer. Please post or im me if you want to know my story. I would appreciate it if people respond because i want to round up as many kids as i can to make cedu pay the price. I also want to talk to parents who are thinking of sending there kid to a theraputic school. Please don't do it the same thing as jail only you pay mounds of cash for it!!! I was recently taken out by one of my parents who fouht with othe other in court. ::crybaby::  ::armed::  :skull:  :skull:  "

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[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-08-01 22:44 ]

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CEDU / Brown Schools and derivatives / clones / Lets get real
« on: May 16, 2004, 11:24:00 PM »
[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-08-01 22:46 ]

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CEDU / Brown Schools and derivatives / clones / Lets get real
« on: May 15, 2004, 09:57:00 PM »
[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-08-01 22:45 ]

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CEDU / Brown Schools and derivatives / clones / SPLITTING
« on: May 05, 2004, 10:41:00 AM »
Great questions! Wow you DID have a lot of balls. I was a therapist there (NOT an employee of CEDU!) in the late 90s. Didn't stay long. Do you think we know each other? How long were you there? Who was the worst team leader? I had the most trouble with Brandi, but Russ wasn't a whole lot better. Just a couple of ignorant, mean-spirited, power-hunger smart asses. Gee, do you think I have issues?...

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On 2004-05-04 19:50:00, Anonymous wrote:

"OK, I'm reading all this shit and I'm wondering--why didn't more people split????



I got caught the first time but made it the second.



It was in running springs and I walked out in the morning through back country, hiding. I saved up candy bars, money (7 bucks!, layered some clothing. Approached the town from the back country and went into a laundromat with a big window and and ran into a mother of two. I was afraid she's report me so I told her I was deserted on a camping trip w/a friend and my folks were gone.



She asked me where I was from and said "I'm going there in 5 days to a family reunion." So for 5 days I stayed with her and babysat her two kids while she worked and kept my head down in the car and then she drove me home.  She got free babysitting, I got an angel.



When I got home, I think my Dad was sympathetic, was uncomfortable with the place, and my MOM wanted me to go back and I said no way, I'm going to Haight Ashbury (having no idea what that was) to live with my friend and I'm going to school.

My Dad one-upped my mother and I never went back.



The point is, I was the most fragile girl with no balls to runaway but I did it anyway.  CEDU was very motivating in that respect.



What prevented others from doing that?



Also, when you finally got to home visits, why didn't your parents keep you there?  Home visits would have been my next line of exit.



"

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Nicely done, Max!

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On 2004-04-28 11:27:00, Maximus wrote:

"These Researchers Are My Heroes and Inspiration

Scott Miller and Barry Duncan at http://www.talkingcure.com



Treatment that Harms . . .(



More and more, adolescents are being referred to treatment.  A popular approach is to put these young people into treatment settings with peers (e.g., group therapy, guided group interaction, boot camp, etc.). (CEDU CEDU CEDU max)



These approaches are not only politically but also economically popular--simply put, fewer therapists ((therapists????)max)are required.  



The data say, however, that these approaches not only do not work but actually increase the problematic behavior they are intended to solve.  



Researchers Dishion, McCord, and Poulin (1999) reviewed the exiting literature and found that such peer-group oriented interventions inadvertently reinforce the problem behavior--in particular among young, high-risk youth.  



Dishion, T.J., McCord, J., and Poulin, F. (1999).  When interventions harm.   American Psychologist, 54(9), 755-764.





Here you'll find archived reviews of research on children and adolescents.

Adolescents, Depression, and Therapy: The evidence so far . . .



Well, what do you do with depressed kids?  In spite of an absolute lack of evidence of safety and efficacy, the pharmaceutical industry says, "medicate them." (Hi Ulrich) Therapists, of course, say, "treat them."  And yet, the data on psychotherapy are not so compelling either.  In this study, researchers compared ,(Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) CBT,  systematic behavioral family therapy, and unstructured supportive therapy. The results showed that 60% of those receiving CBT recovered compared to 29% for family therapy and 36% for supportive therapy.



While the results initially seem to make a compelling argument for CBT nearly a third of those in the study had a recurrence within 4 months despite receiving booster sessions.



The conclusion: since other studies show that 90% of adolescents spontaneously recover from depression within 1 to 2 years, there is little evidence that therapy of any kind helps.



(Interesting that a two year EG program falls within the range of natural recovery and taked credit for the natural recovery)(Max 2004)

Birmaher, B. et al. (2000).  Clinical outcome after short-term psychotherapy for adolescents with major depressive disorder.  Archives of General Psychiatry, 57, 29-36.



Are number of sessions related to amount of change in successful psychotherapy with children? (Tine In Boarding schools) (max)



This is an important study--one that confirms findings from other studies on therapy with kids.  As should be well known to most clinicians, researchers have long established that a logrythmic relationship exists between the number of sessions of therapy and the percentage of improvement.  This finding is referred to in the adult treatment literature as the "Dose-Effect" relationship.  The finding is critical as it allows clinicians to determine whether a client is responding to treatment as they should when it is successful and thereby allow for modifications in the treatment or therapeutic relationship when it is not.  It has also been used by managed care companies to suggest that long term therapeutic relationships should be ended in the absence of meaningful change in the early stages of treatment.  



This firmly established clinical finding leads to the question, "Does it apply to work with kids."  And the answer thus far is, "absolutely not!"   There could be many reasons for this finding, not the least of which is that the treatees themselves--that is, children--are not the ones who determine whether to start, continue or end treatment services thus obliterating any connection between amount of change and duration of treatment.



(too bad CEDU isn't time limited and voluntary then it might work) $$$$$$$ get the picture? - max 2004)  

Salzer, M.S., Bickman, L., & Lambert, W. (1999).  Dose-effect relationship in children's psychotherapy services.  Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 67(2), 228-238.



Does anything work with Kids?  



A Review of the Research on Therapy with Kids

Every years literally thousands of children are taken to therapy by caregivers or mandated into treatment by teachers and school officials.  But what does the data say?  Well, researchers Weisz et al. (1992) reviewed the literature on the treatment of children and found controlled outcome studies have shown consistent evidence of the benefit of therapy for children and adolescents.  However, research focused on more representative treatment (that is, done in clinics) shows much more modest effects--in fact,



most studies in clinics have found no significant effects!  This is a big problem in research--the difference between efficacy studies (those done in laboratory settings) and effectiveness studies (those done in real life clinical settings).  



This is also the reason why The Institute For the Study of Therapuetic Change (ISTC) recommends that clinicians have a method in place for the routine and systematic monitoring of the outcome of their clinical work. (This is why I (max) use the Client Directed Outcome Informed Measures of the above ISTC)(max)

Weisz, J.R. et al. (1992).  The lab versus the clinic: Effects of child and adolescent psychotherapy.  American Psychologist, 47(12), 1578-1585.



Social Phobia in Kids: Something that Does Work

Researchers Beidel and Turner have developed and now assessed the efficacy of an approach for "shy" kids called, "Social Effectiveness Training."   Building on the principles of intervention known to work with adolescents, these researchers spent less time exploring why kids were shy and medicating them and more time on helping them develop skills to handle social situations competently.  After just 12 weeks of participation in the program two-thirds of the kids were no longer shy or frightened in social situations--a number which increased to 75% at six month follow-up.   An innovative aspect of the program was the pairing of the kids in the program with other children for public social activities!



Beidel, Deborah C.; Turner, Samuel M.; Taylor-Ferreira, Jill C. Behavior Modification. (1999 Oct) Vol 23(4) 630-646.

What Causes Schizophrenia?

Schizophrenia is the enigma and Achilles' heal of the mental health profession.   Though awareness of the problem has been around for hundreds of years, the field is yet to come up with a convincing etiological theory.  Many have been advanced: from family dynamics to disturbed dopamine to morphological differences in the brain.  Now researchers have aimed their sites on an uncommonly simple and common cause: childhood infections.  Not prenatal infections as was once thought, but common infections transmitted by siblings during childhood.  The research fits with other findings which show in increase incidence of the destructive disorder in larger families with 2 years or less between siblings.



Westergaard, T. (November, 1999).  Archives of General Psychiatry, 56, 993-8.

For More Information Contact:



Institute for the Study of Therapeutic Change

P.O.B. 578264 Chicago, IL 60657-8264

Tel: 1(773) 404-5130

FAX: 1 (520) 438-7157

Internet: [email protected] with questions or comments about this web site.

Copyright © 1997 Institute for the Study of Therapeutic Change

Last modified: July 03, 2001

"

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[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-08-01 22:48 ]

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Open Free for All / Sex with Ghosts
« on: April 13, 2004, 03:21:00 AM »
I didn't see a post that labeled you psychotic or disordered. They are saying this is a classic, text book event that is a part of brain function in falling asleep. We've even been able to produce it in the laboratory. Sorry, it's text book - and not uncommon. You certainly have the right to think that ghosts are having sex with you if that's important to you. However, insisting on that belief rather than accepting that it is a common and well understood phenomenon looks - well - odd.


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On 2004-04-12 19:48:00, Anonymous wrote:

"IF A GHOST OR SPIRIT WAS MAKING CONTACT WITH ME,WOULDN'T THAT MOST LIKELY OCCUR IN MY BRAIN?  IN YOUR WORLD VIEW, I LOOK PSYCHOIC OR DISORDERED, BUT I'M NOT.  I EXPLORED THE IDEA OF SLEEP PARALYIS, BUT IT DOESN'T FIT.  SCIENCE CONTINUES TO DISREGARD ANY HUMAN EXPERIENCES THAT DON' FIT INTO ITS NARROW VIEW.  JUST BECAUSE SCIENCE PUTS A LABEL ON SOMEHING DOESN'T MEAN THEY HAVE ALL THE ANSWERS.



THE PENDULUM IS SWINGING PEOPLE, TRY TO KEEP UP."

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[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-08-01 22:31 ]

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[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-08-01 22:29 ]

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Sounds familiar.
 
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On 2004-04-06 13:39:00, Anonymous wrote:

"Sorry for the anonymous post, but CEDU is very threatening...



Lori Rist? was in charge of the transition program in Running Springs California - She was a fabulously fine individual before CEDU. The cult brainwashed her with charisma and promises of enlightenment. She worked with Bill Lane - the ex Heroin addict CEDU Executive. That is the only one I know of except Billy - nice guy, who went to work in a program around Bend Oregon.



Lori saw the light and left as director of NWA sometime in the last year - too late to save her marriage.



Her husband (a therapist) Marc worked for BCA and fought the system with Rand Gurley and Jack Clearman for around three years. He fought them furiously to get rid of jump suits, get them unlimited religious privileges, to stop yelling in raps, to change the brainwashing in prophets and to stop them from playing head games on anxious, depressed, bipolar, paranoid, narcissistic and borderline kids. He believed some of the harsh program processes could be helpful for antisocials and non dual-diagnoses severe drug abusers, but not much else.



Rand, Marc Rob, Jack, and Jenny managed to get things under some slight control, but, the staff took the abuse underground and did abuse kids covertly at table assignments, on restrictions and by placing kids they did not like in dorms where they would be abused - or by shunning and tormenting them emotionally through other peers.



The Director, LaTeresa, who has no mental health experience or education, and the staff had an alliance and would not answer e mails from most therapists and would shun them along with any staff who questioned or tried to change anything about the program. This was highly effective for them in not changing anything and feeling righteous and powerful against the evil therapists.



Management then put the therapists in charge of team parent communications. This effectively forced them to either be in constant conflict with the program staff or sell out their ethics and "buy in." This would mean lying to the parents in team meetings under peer pressure, or losing your job. This was a deliberate action by management to make the therapists irrelevant while using them to get state school funding.



All of the above therapists were forced out for not lying, and for trying to protect kids rights, Two clinical directors who did "buy in" were eliminated just to show power.



Eventually they found therapists who would let CEDU control them, and, that is what they have at NWA, RMA, BCA and Milestones now.



What did Lori do to you? I can imagine that, back then, she must have been ve

"
[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-04-06 14:21 ]

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CEDU / Brown Schools and derivatives / clones / Will it really close??
« on: April 06, 2004, 01:15:00 AM »
How do we know it's $80m in the hole? Where is this data from? I just can't imagine a machine like Brown Schools going out of business.

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[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-08-01 22:50 ]

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[ This Message was edited by: former CEDU therapist on 2004-08-01 22:51 ]

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