The RAID® Course: a relentlessly positive approach.
3 days
This is a 3 day course which we bring to you. you just provide the training room, the delegates and refreshments, and we do everything else.
Course agenda
- An overview of the RAID approach: the philosophy.
- How to reinforce. Why do some 'reinforcers' fail to reinforce? When a person says they have 'tried everything' with a person, what powerful category of reinforcers have they often failed to try? How some people actually discourage behaviour when they think they are reinforcing it.
- Why do most people place too much emphasis on 'consistency'?
- Asking 'green' questions not 'red' ones. What is wrong with this question: What should we do when John can't sleep at night and so comes out of his room and starts smashing things up and assaults staff when they try to stop him?' What question should we ask?
- What is meant by 'invisible appropriate behaviour'? How do we recognise this and, by doing so, counter extreme behaviour?
- Defining behaviour that is contradictory to the individual's extreme behaviour and working to develop that.
- Why working on an individual's problems results in exaggerating these problems, and what we do instead?
- What are 'Higher-Order' personality characteristics and how should we reinforce them?
- Why is this statement probably untrue and how should we capitalise on the real truth of the situation: 'We find that whenever Sue harms herself she's had an argument with her boyfriend just before; every time they have an argument, she harms herself.'?
- More PAID than RAID. Some people exhibit very little appropriate behaviour; what should we do then?
- What is Constructive Criticism - how is it different from standard criticism, and why do people respond differently to it?
- Rules and 'boundaries' are important, vital even - in fact they go some way to describing the 'A' of the acronym. How do we utilise them constructively, positively, to the benefit of the people we work with and care for, and those around them?
- Punishment and Sanctions. Even the most powerful positive approach to extreme behaviour needs to make sense of sanctions.
- Addressing Issues. When to and how to.
- Feedback. What it is and how to utilise its power.
- Deeply RAIDing. Those we work with can tell whether we are genuine in what we do, or whether it's simply a 'technique'.
- Why proper consideration of the person's future is vital in almost every case.
- How to do it effectively.
- And more
What this RAID Course will do for you...
- You will have a clear philosophy on how to view extreme behaviour. A philosophy which allows you to intervene positively and effectively to minimise its occurrence.
- You will see how that philosophy applies not just in your work, but in your private life too. After all, it is philosophy, not just a technique.
- You will gain a clearer perspective on what you already do, seeing more clearly why some actions you take work, and others don't.
- You will see that it is a positive, clear and effective approach to working with extreme behaviour.
- You will be better at reinforcing others and be more aware of the positive actions and traits they display.
- You will know why consideration of the future is so important in general, and especially in this area.
- You will be able to ask constructive questions, which have answers which nurture and develop people rather than focusing on 'problems'.
Course Highlights...
- A clear, positive philosophy and technique for working effectively with people who display extreme behaviour.
- Provides interventions with a clear sense of purpose.
- Shows how reinforcing key aspects of a client's behaviour can stop extreme behaviours.
- Demonstrates how to reinforce behaviour effectively. How to make social reinforcement work. How to design formalised yet friendly reinforcement systems. Avoiding reinforcing 'traps'.
- Knowing the two key types of appropriate behaviour, and how to spot them.
- Why we are best to play down disruptive behaviour. Why punishment usually doesn't work.
- How to avoid people 'pushing against us' when we try to influence them and how to guide their behaviour for the better.
- How good 'boundaries' for behaviour are productive and energising while bad ones are short-cuts to endless trouble. What makes the difference between good and bad.
- What to do when clients exhibit so many extreme behaviours that it is difficult to know where to start.
- What to do when it seems that some sort of punishments are unavoidable.
- How to avoid clients 'manipulating' staff.
Click here to cost and plan your training with our training planner.