Youth Justice Committee Ontario. Conflict Mediation Services of Downsview. The Effect of Affect on Reading - The Compass of Shame and Learning to Read - Dr. Donald Nathanson. The following transcript has not been edited for journal or magazine publication (see 'Interview Notes' for more details). Bold is used to emphasize our [Children of the Code] sense of the importance of what is being said and does not necessarily reflect gestures or tones of emphasis that occurred during the interview.
David Boulton: I’d like to start with what impassions you, what has brought you into the kind of work you do. Attention is an Emotion: Dr. Donald Nathanson: So often when we think about education and the education process we take the position that education is about the way a child receives information and processes it. I don’t just mean that you have to learn how you’re going to control your emotions in the classroom. We didn’t really understand that for many years. Well, you’ve heard people talk about Attention Deficit Disorder, and strangely it is treated with medications that alter emotions, even though everybody thinks it’s treating something cognitive.
Dr. Dr. Dr. The Centre for Restorative Justice. The Centre for Restorative Justice is an initiative by the Simon Fraser University School of Criminology. Restorative Justice is an old idea with a new name. Its roots can be found in Aboriginal healing traditions and the non-retaliatory responses to violence endorsed by many faith communities.
It represents a return of the simple wisdom of viewing conflict as an opportunity for a community to learn and grow. It operates on the premise that conflict, even criminal conflict, inflicts harm, and therefore individuals must accept responsibility for repairing that harm. Communities are empowered to choose their response to conflict. Victims, offenders and communities actively participate in devising mutually beneficial solutions, and implementing those solutions. Conflicts are resolved in a way that restores harmony in the community members' relationships, and allows people to continue to live together in a safer, healthy environment. From Empathy to Community. From Empathy to Community Donald Nathanson, The Silvan S.
Tomkins Institute, Philadelphia, PennsylvaniaPosted 1998-03-15 (Reprinted from The Annual of Psychoanalysis, Volume 25, edited by Jerome A. Winer for the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis. ©1997 by the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis.) In an issue of this annual devoted to the memory of Michael Franz Basch, it seems only reasonable to show how one of his contributions has helped expand the power and depth of interpretation while providing new therapeutic force for our field.
In Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego, Freud (1921) acknowledged the common observation that wordless fear could mutualize throughout a herd or community of animals with great simplicity. Affect Theory Finding nothing within psychoanalytic experience or theory to explain this realm of data, Basch now began to evaluate theories of emotion that derived from other sources.
Empathy The Empathic Wall. The Next Step: Developing Restorative Communities, Part 2 | Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, USA 2006. International Institute for Restorative Practices (IIRP) | Graduate education & professional development for education, criminal justice, social services, pastoral and other professionals.