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annabellefrazier.com
šŸ‡ŗšŸ‡¦ | CJ / Psych-Law Research: Decision making & Sexual Violence | CJFSS Grad. Prog. Director & Asst. Teaching Prof @SouthernMiss | āšœļøSaints Fanāšœļø | #academicsky #psychlaw
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ā€œOverwhelming evidence?ā€ Itā€™s almost as if theyā€™ve read and seen nothing about the case since 1999ā€¦
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Yup. See you there!
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Thereā€™s a saying in Russian that translates to something like, ā€œthe less you know, the better you sleep.ā€ Itā€™s not wrong šŸ¤·ā€ā™€ļø
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Dean of Vibes sounds like my kind of jobā€¦!
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I never understood the need for any of this. They are adults and itā€™s their education.
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Fascinating!!
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My personal observation is that many Russians have been quite literally brainwashed by their own govt-controlled media for over a decade. I wonder whether thatā€™s been captured in any recent studies.
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I have multiple calendars (personal, academic, family, consulting) from different platforms and integrate them all in different colors into iCal. I donā€™t put things on my calendar unless itā€™s actually for me to attend or do.
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Thank you so much!
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I was just a tiny bit jealous when Miko mentioned it the other day. What a cool idea.
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Thank you for including me!
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This is great!! Thanks!!
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I havenā€™t found the Crim people yet.. Can you share any of the starter packs?
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This really jives with my experience in practice. We do okay (not great) with Justice-involved youth, but essentially ignore everyone else. The result is that forensic treatment with a trauma-informed approach is rare, and actual trauma treatment is seen as counterproductive.
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Also, I give credit for ā€œminimally-relevant participationā€. So long as you contribute and are not off topic, you get credit.
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I intentionally ask student for wrong answers only. We have fun with it.
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Donā€™t discount the value of learning from oneā€™s own bad choicesā€¦ Iā€™ve done multiple things I would (and do!) advise students to avoid.
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Right. I tried different things but couldnā€™t get it to work for them. Hopefully itā€™s different for you!
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I did, and then students told me they didnā€™t have the option to ā€œlikeā€ anythingā€¦ so either they didnā€™t see it, or institution removed this option for them šŸ¤·ā€ā™€ļø
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Iā€™ve used Wix for a while and I like it better than the other platforms Iā€™ve tried.
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90%. The rest is meetings that should have been emails šŸ˜‚šŸ˜‚šŸ˜‚
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I hear you, and I know itā€™s a bit trickier to do in qual research. Just a preference of one tired reader!
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(Probably unpopular opinion): I really hate those. Combining makes results harder to distinguish from the authorā€™s ideas/sense-making. I read research papers to find info, so why make it harder for me to find ?
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šŸ‘†this. 100%. How do we get clinicians and evaluators to stop doing this?
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Oh my goodness this is a big one. I see people just ā€˜recyclingā€™ diagnoses because if itā€™s in the record, it must be rightā€¦!!
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Not just long-term, but also multi-modal, case-management supported, and structured for the messy realities of people in careā€¦ wouldnā€™t that be a dream!!
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In most settings outside private practice, we get folks who have chronic (sometimes systemic) ongoing exposure to adversity, but our tx evidence is based on a much more well-off population. It sets up most everyone to fail, and starts off this process.
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Itā€™s absolutely a trauma thing, or at least a well-known phenomenon in that area. Comes from the long-term failure to recognize/study approaches for complex trauma.
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Hahahahaha thatā€™s amazing. I was a trauma service provider for about a decade, so Iā€™ve heard a lot of inaccurate takes on trauma tx (incl. CBT) but thatā€™s a new one! ā€¦ talk about preying on unawarenessā€¦
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100%. It drives me nuts when treatment studies report that people dropped out but offer no sense of why and no real follow up with those folks.
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ā€¦Why arenā€™t my clients benefitting? ā€˜CBT is badā€™, or ā€˜I am badā€™ā€¦ and that led some to new approaches but also to an over-broad and inaccurate dismissal of CBT tools. Not to say that some arenā€™t just trying to profit off the distress!
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Iā€™ve seen a little bit of the practitioner issue youā€™re describing. Often, it was a newer clinician who studied in a program that over-emphasized CBT, who then went to work in forensic/community care, where people tend to have bigger, systemic issues. They experienced the same cog. dissonance:
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Interesting!
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Iā€™m not saying that CBT is the problem. Just that in both practice and research, we donā€™t do a great job of getting and using negative feedback on our approaches and if former clients have these views, it might be our doing.