Aggression Replacement Training
While ART’s moral reasoning day is different than a truly sophistry method discussed as a method for examining faculty beliefs, it fits in very well with working with involuntary clients.
[Whole Class Activity] 10 volunteers (participants) 1 volunteer co-facilitator others observers. Facilitate moral reasoning day as listed below. Students do not need to necessarily take on a part, but answer honestly or they can act as a persona.
- Review Rules for Discussion (See page 111 of Aggression Replacement Training, Revised Edition)
- Introduce/Review Thinking Errors. (See pgs. 98 & 99)
- Have a group member read the Problem Situation aloud.
- Establish the “real” problem so that all group members clearly understand the problem.
- Relate the Problem Situation to the lives of the group members.
- Establish Moral Maturity through eliciting mature responses first, reconstructing less mature responses, and listing them on an ease pad, chalk board, or white board preferably on one side of a T-chart.
- List less morally mature responses second on the other side of the T-chart if they cannot be reconstructed to seem more mature. Provide no reinforcement for less mature reasoning.
- Encourage more mature group members and use the list of mature reasons on the chart to challenge the less mature reasoning of group members.
- Provide perspective taking opportunities by having youth who disagree examine each other’s reasoning for thinking errors.
- Provide role taking opportunities for group participants. (e.g. How would you feel if you were . . ? What would you do if you were …?)
- When possible seek to make more mature answers and reasons for those answers a group decision.
- Praise the group and individuals within the group for positive decisions and mature reasoning.