Cd. Bellamy et Ct. Mowbray, SUPPORTED EDUCATION AS AN EMPOWERMENT INTERVENTION FOR PEOPLE WITH MENTAL-ILLNESS, Journal of community psychology, 26(5), 1998, pp. 401-413
Citations number
32
Categorie Soggetti
Social Work",Psychology,"Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
Many adults with severe mental illnesses experienced disability onset
in early adulthood, causing interruption or indefinite postponement of
postsecondary ed education. Supported education programs are a recent
innovation to assist in integrating people with mental illness, who d
esire to resume their postsecondary education in an educational settin
g where they can experience life as a student rather than as a mental
patient. This study reports analyses of focus groups conducted to asse
ss the impact of a supported education program from the perspectives o
f students who graduated from the program. Themes emerged from the dat
a and were grouped under the following headings: problems and concerns
, wants and desires, impact of supported education, personal empowerme
nt, collective empowerment, and postprogram supports needed. While the
program did not primarily view itself as an empowerment intervention,
results revealed that empowerment did occur and contributed to the in
tervention's emphasis on self-awareness, group support, and advocacy.
(C) 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.