Friday 31 May 2013

Part a) for cognitive skills programmes

              (a)    Outline how cognitive skills programmes can be used as a treatment for offenders

After a guilty verdict, offender may be given numerous sentences which may punish them for their actions, or attempt to rehabilitate them – or both. One way in which an offender may be rehabilitated is through the use of treatment programmes, such as cognitive skills programmes.

Cognitive skills programmes refer to the cognitive approach’s explanation of turning to crime that criminals have distorted cognitions that cause their offending, such as denial of responsibility, optimistic fantasies of anti-social behaviour, poor moral development, and having tendencies to incorrectly attribute actions to hostile intent (Yochelson and Samenow, Palmer and Hollin).

Two examples of cognitive skills programmes offered to offenders are reasoning and rehabilitation therapy, and enhanced thinking skills. Reasoning and rehabilitation therapy targets moral development, and attempts to encourage the offender to take a social perspective on their behaviour, in the hope that this will discourage them to offend if they understand the effects their actions have on others and how to think more morally. Enhanced thinking skills programmes target aspects of cognition such as self-control, and aim to boost pro-social behaviour by teaching interpersonal communication skills.

One study which looked at how cognitive skills programmes can be used as a treatment for offenders is through Friendship et al, which compared the recidivism rates of those on cognitive skills programmes such as ETS, to those who had not been part of such programme. 670 male offenders who had taken ETS or reasoning and rehabilitation therapy were thus compared to 1801 offenders who hadn’t, and the results showed that reconviction rates were 14% lower in the therapy group. This equated to 21000 crimes prevented, based on the researchers’ estimates.


Thus, cognitive skills programmes can be used to treat offenders by improving the different aspects of cognition thought to be responsible for offending, such as interpersonal skills, moral development and self-control.   

9 comments:

  1. would yu be able to write al this in 10 mins??? :?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I wrote this in just over ten minutes. I would probably not include the first sentence in my answer in the exam.

      Delete
  2. What mark did yu get for this..and in general what mark do yu get

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I didn't have this one marked but I followed the general structure that I usually do, and I get 9 or 10 out of ten for my part a answers

      Delete
    2. What structure do you use for part a questions?

      Delete
    3. Here's the structure I used for my part a) questions: http://ocra2psychologyg543.blogspot.co.uk/2013/05/tackling-part-questions.html

      Delete
  3. Could you do a model answer with THIS study Cann, instead of friendship plz..


    does it matter if i learn this study even though i hvent been taught?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I haven't studied Cann sorry, so I can't. Just learn the one you know best.

      Delete

  4. Eliminate Hsv-1&2 (Herpes)..

    The best online,

    _________________________Robinsonbuckler11 @ gmail com

    ReplyDelete