Importance Of Social Skills Training For Juvenile Offender

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Social Skills Training: The foremost importance of social skills training is because juvenile sex offenders lack basic social skills (Kahn & Lafond, 1988). This training often involves instructions about model skills, and the therapist helps in modelling that skill. The juvenile offender is required to role-play and practice the skill and is given performance feedback by the therapist (Bourke & Donohue, 1996, p. 49). Social skills training can be taught in an individual therapy format or in a group format (Becker, 1990). Hollins (1990) in his study, posits that social skills training with juvenile delinquents (not sex offenders alone) was successful in altering aspects of social behavior but did not alter re-offending rates. Anger Control …show more content…

Juvenile sex offenders are viewed as being products of a multiple dysfunctional systems, therefore, the intervention of therapy is needed in these multiple systems (Borduin, Henggeler, Blaske, & Stein, 1990). Although multi-systemic interventions vary for each offender, generally this approach is a comprehensive therapy which targets characteristics of the juvenile sex offender, his family, and his peer relationships for intervention (Borduin et al., 1990). Specifically, multi-systemic therapy addresses the juvenile offender's cognitive deficits such as denial, empathy, and distortions, family relations such as cohesion and parental supervision, and dysfunctional peer relationships (Borduin et al., 1990). Borduin et al. (1990) randomly assigned juvenile sex offenders to either a multi-systemic treatment condition or an individual therapy condition. Each treatment used both male and female therapist. Individual therapy focused on personal, family, and academic issues. The theoretical orientation of the individual therapists was a blend of psychodynamic, humanistic, and behavioral approaches. After a long-term follow-up, Borduin et al. (1990), discovered that subjects from the multi-systemic treatment group had significantly group (75%). Borduin et al. then concluded that multi-systemic therapy was more effective than individual therapy in the treatment of juvenile sex

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