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Showing posts with label Meeting details. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Meeting details. Show all posts

Thursday, 13 February 2014

Topic for first meeting



At our first meeting we will be discussing 'what is psychology?'.

When we say that word what do we mean? When we say that we work within the discipline how does that shape the work that we do, the services we work within, and the people we work with?

To provide some sort of an anchor for our discussions we have picked a short chapter from Guy Holmes' book 'psychology in the real world'. Which, by the way is a great book! I'll bring along my copy to the meeting so that people can have a flick through it.

We have been given permission to reproduce the chapter (no. 2 'what is meant by psychology') and share it with those who are attending. I will email out a copy to everyone on the list two weeks beforehand.

So..... if you haven't done so already contact me on aidanjakelly[at]gmail.com and put your name on the email list.





Here are some possible topics for future discussions:
  1. The use of academic/ professional language. How it can exclude or marginalise consumers and maintain professionals privileged positions.
  2. ECT- good, bad or ugly?
  3. Diagnosis, who wins and who losses by using the DSM and ICD?
  4. Politics and mental health- can clinicians really be a-political? Do we not treat the symptoms of a sick society?
  5. Symptom reduction as the goal. What are the pro's and con's of a system that is set up that way?
  6. RCT's as the gold standard in research- what are the pitfalls? 
  7. "The literature states that CBT is the best evidenced treatment for X disorder". What does that mean for all other modalities? How useful are things like the NICE guidelines? Are we evidence-based practitioners if we don't use CBT?
  8. What is mental illness? Does it really mean that your mind is ill? How about dis-order? When do you stop being abnormal and become normal? Prevalence rates of certain disorders have sky-rocketed (e.g. ADHD). Are those behaviours still abnormal when so many children in the Australia now have the diagnosis? 
  9. What's the role of psychiatric medication? How do professionals educate people about the meds they are taking and the rationale for taking them?


This is only a provisional list and we encourage people to suggest other topics (just email me). We hope that 2 or 3 people from the group will agree to facilitate each discussion. You don't need to be an expert in the area, you just need to pick a short article, video, or podcast that relates to the topic (for people to access beforehand), feel familiar enough with the issues to start off the discussion and guide us in case we get stuck.

Looking forward to starting our discussions on the 12th of March!!




Monday, 10 February 2014

A first post!



Welcome to the Sydney Hedge School. This blog has been set up as a platform on which to document the discussions that take place at our meetings. We hope that by publicising these discussions we will attract people who wish to engage with us, either by attending a meeting or through the blog itself.

We will be having our first meeting on Wednesday 12th March at 6pm upstairs in The Friend in Hand on Cowper Street in Glebe.

Who are we and what is the purpose of the group?

Well, we work and/or study in the area of mental health. The founders of the group are current clinical psychology trainees. However, we hope that the group will include people that work or study in the areas of clinical psychology or psychiatry more broadly. We are interested in adopting a critical approach to psychology, psychiatry and the mental health industry as a whole. We see a value in questioning the dominant practices within the industry. We often feel that these same practices are pressured upon us so that we must conform to fit in, or at best, resist conforming but remain quiet for fear of being excluded.

This group is to serve as a forum for those who are interested in discussing these practices.

What's in a name?

The hedge school name comes from a tradition in Ireland that started in the 18th century similar to that of the ragged schools that followed in Britain during the 19th century. These movements were set up to deliver education to those in society who were otherwise excluded, due to religion and/or social class. They were of minimal or no cost to the students and the teachers delivered their lessons orally in an informal setting and they were not bound by a curriculum or a need to matriculate. Teachers taught because they enjoyed it and the students wanted to learn for the sake of learning.

Education from the margins at it's best!

It's this sort of philosophy that we hope to adopt for our group.

Want to attend? 

If you would like to attend a meeting or have your name added to the email list then please send an email to aidanjakelly[at]gmail.com.
The first meeting will be an introduction to critical psychology and how it might be applied to the provision of mental health services.