1 / 20

Helping Distressed Students

Helping Distressed Students. Michael B. Brown, Associate Dean Harriot College of Arts and Sciences Travis Lewis, Director of Student Safety & Services Dean of Students Office. Students in Distress. Students face increasing stressors during college.

darrel-sims
Télécharger la présentation

Helping Distressed Students

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Helping Distressed Students Michael B. Brown, Associate Dean Harriot College of Arts and Sciences Travis Lewis, Director of Student Safety & Services Dean of Students Office

  2. Students in Distress • Students face increasing stressors during college. • Faculty & staff are in a good position to identify students who have problems. • There are resources available once you identify a student in need.

  3. Distressed Behavior Behavior resulting from psychological problems, stress, or crises that interfere with their ability to learn.

  4. Distressed Behavior • Repeated requests for special consideration, extensions, etc. • Unusual or exaggerated emotional responses • Withdrawal from activities or friends

  5. Distressed Behavior • Significant change in sleep or eating patterns • Declining academic performance • Excessive absences, especially if attendance was previously consistent • Perfectionism, procrastination, or excessive worrying

  6. Distressed Behaviors • Markedly changed patterns of interaction (avoiding participation or dominating discussion) • Erratic behavior • Indications of alcohol or drug use interfering with academic or social performance • Sleeping in class

  7. Serious Distressed Behaviors • Depressed mood • Marked changes in personal hygiene • Falling asleep in class • Excessively active and talkative • Difficulty communicating • Slurred, disjointed, or incoherent speech • Loss of contact with reality

  8. Serious Distressed Behaviors • Seeing/hearing things that do not exist • Persistent peculiar thoughts • Suicidal thoughts, jokes or intentions • Indirect threats to self or others • Expressing hopelessness or helplessness

  9. Helping Distressed Students • Listen • Give basic advice • Make referrals to campus resources • Contact the Dean of Students Office via ECU Cares 737-5555

  10. Helping Distressed Students • Most distressed students welcome help • Talk to the student in private • Express your concern in nonjudgmental terms “I've noticed you’ve been absent from class lately and I’m concerned”

  11. Helping Distressed Students • Listen in a sensitive, non-threatening way • Avoid early reassurance or attempt to provide a solution • Communicate understanding to student by repeating back the gist of what the student has said.

  12. Helping Distressed Students • Avoid judging, evaluating, or criticizing. Respect the student’s value system, even if you disagree with it. • Provide information about resources • Ask for some agreement to refer to another campus resource

  13. When to Make a Referral • The student is in crisis • The behavior is beyond your skill level • The behavior persists • The behavior is getting worse • You are unsure of how to proceed • You want to talk with someone about your observations or concerns

  14. How to Make a Referral • Summarize your observations about the student’s behavior • Express your concern about student’s distress • Assure the student that seeking help does not mean they are “crazy” • Make phone call from your office to help student make an appointment with resource

  15. ECU Cares • Reporting system to get assistance for persons with behaviors of concern • Not a replacement for emergency responders!! • Operated by Dean of Students Office • Reports can be anonymous • ECU Cares phone line: 737-5555 • Online reporting form: www.ecu.edu/ecucares

  16. Resources for Assistance • Counseling & Student Development 328-6661 • Student Health Services 328-6841 • Student Rights & Responsibilities 328-6824 • Dean of Students Office 329-9297 • ECU Cares 737-5555 • ECU Police 9-1-1 or 328-6787 (non-emergency) • Academic resources (Pirate Tutoring, advisors, department chairs and associate deans)

  17. University Behavioral Concerns Team • ECU’s Threat Assessment Team • Meets weekly throughout the year • Composed of student affairs professionals, faculty, university administrators • Receives reports of concerning behavior through: • team members directly; • Referrals from faculty/staff/students • the ECU Cares phone line (#737-5555) and webpage (www.ecu.edu/ecucares).

  18. UBCT Process • The UBCT is convened to conducts an assessment of the student and his/her situation • After the assessment the UBCT plans and coordinates interventions to ensure that students: • receive any necessary support services • help protect the campus community from the potential for targeted violence • After the assessment and interventions, continued case management to monitor progress

  19. CARE Team • A subgroup of the UBCT • Coordinates interventions for distressed students with complex problems who do not present a threat to the campus community • Brings together multiple resources and case management coordination

  20. Questions? Dr. Travis Lewis, Director for Student Safety & Services (252) 328-9297 lewistr@ecu.edu Dr. Michael B. Brown, Associate Dean Harriot College of Arts and Sciences (252) 328-4170 brownmi@ecu.edu

More Related